Child Rights
Child Poverty & Wellbeing
Children's Education
Child Neglect & Exploitation
Children, Health & the Environment
Children, Youth and Gender
Social Policy
Monitoring & Evaluation
Children, Arts and Culture
Participatory Media & Expression
Publications
Recommended Links
Subscribe

 send

Follow us on Twitter Join our group on Facebook
The New School
Graduate Program in International Affairs
Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service

A Global Measurement Approach versus a Country-Specific Measurement Approach: Do they draw the same picture of child poverty? The case of Vietnam

   
Posted on 05-27-2009Translate this page Translate this page   
A Global Measurement Approach versus a Country-specific Measurement Approach : Do they Draw the Same Picture of Child Poverty? The Case of Vietnam by Roelen, Keetie, Gassmann, Franziska and Neubourg, Chris de
Maastricht Graduate School of Governance
06 May 2008

Summary:
Child poverty can be measured using approaches that aim to make cross-country comparisons on a regional or global scale or to capture a country’s specific poverty context. The first can be referred to as a global approach and the second as a country-specific approach. These underlying rationales for the design and use of a child poverty approach have great implications for their theoretical and conceptual frameworks. This paper investigates whether the conceptual differences between the global and country-specific approaches also draw a different empirical picture of child poverty when applied to a specific country. Vietnam is used as a case study for the application of both approaches and analysis of results. The methodology used identifies children at two different levels of poverty, namely severe deprivation and absolute poverty. Findings suggest that the country-specific approach is more inclusive than the global approach, identifying a larger percentage of children as poor and capturing the large majority of those children identified under the global approach. Poverty figures of both approaches further convey a varying picture of child poverty when considering the different dimensions of vulnerability. The demographic composition of the poverty groups by either one or both of the approaches does not display significant differences.
 Available online.
Download document
Add to delicio.usdelicio.us | Add to DiggDigg | Add to FresquiFresqui | Add to Google BookmarkGoogle Bookmark | Add to MeneameMeneame | Add to TechnoratiTechnorati | Add to TwitterTwitter | Add to Yahoo My WebYahoo! |
Add to EnchilameEnchilame |
child rights, children's rights, Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), 20th anniversary CRC, child poverty, wellbeing, Monitoring & Evaluation
Recommend this article to a friend

Last Articles at Monitoring & Evaluation

Manual for the measurement of indicators for children in formal care
Positive Indicators of Child Wellbeing: A Conceptual Framework, Measures and Methodological Issues
Process Evaluation in a Randomized Community Trial of a Youth-Aimed, Media Campaign
Impact and Evaluation of Peru’s Basic Education Programme by Ritu Yadav
Impact and Evaluation of Latin America Laboratory for the Evaluation of Educational Quality (LLECE) by Annie Place
Impact and Evaluation of eThekwini Safer City Project by Monika Shankar
Impact and Evaluation of TRY by Astrid Corvin-Brittin
Counting Children In! 2nd International Conference of the International Society For Child Indicators
Impact Assessment: Evaluating Monitoring & Evaluation Approaches
Call for Papers: 5th International Conference on Children and Youth in MENA Cities
See all articles at Monitoring & Evaluation

 Comentarios 0 Comments of A Global Measurement Approach versus a Country-Specific Measurement Approach: Do they draw the same picture of child poverty? The case of Vietnam
Be the first one commenting A Global Measurement Approach versus a Country-Specific Measurement Approach: Do they draw the same picture of child poverty? The case of Vietnam:
Name (*):
Last Name (*):
Email (*):
Comments (*):
Code (*):
(*) Requested Information