Dr. Sepideh Yousefzadeh Thesis: Childhoods embargoed: constructing and reconstructing multidimensional child poverty in Iran Year: 2013 Promotor(s): Chris de Neubourg & Franziska Gassman Abstract: My PhD dissertation examines monetary and non-monetary dimensions of child poverty in Iran between 1984 and 2009. I define children as all persons below the age of 18 and apply a constructivist perspective in defining childhoods. The theoretical framework of the study brings in three different concepts: deprivation from basic needs, social exclusion, and cultural-political construction of childhood. Convention on the Rights of the Child is referred to as a guide in order to define different poverty dimensions. Accordingly, the following dimensions are examined in my study: education, housing, water and sanitation, child labor, information, leisure (under basic needs); parent’s employment, parents literacy, income, mobility, access to reliable sources of energy, single parenthood (social exclusion); legal protection, and child marriage (cultural and political construction). Ultimately, this dissertation aims to address some key questions: Who are the poorest of the poor? Where are disparities and how they change over time? Is it possible to identify patterns of poverty in some specific social categories (e.g. girls and ethnic groups)? What are differences and similarities between children. |
- ABOUT US
- RESEARCH
- EDUCATION
- The Graduate School
- PhD Programme
- MSc Programmes
- Capacity Development
- News
- Design and Evaluation of Public Policies (DEPP)
- Design and Evaluation of Innovation Policies (DEIP)
- Evidence-Based Policy Research Methods (EPRM)
- Migration Management Diploma Programme (MMDP)
- Moving the Migration Policy Agenda Forward (MMPAF)
- Online Courses
- Short Courses (Masters)
- Tailor-made programmes
- UNU-MERIT, ITU Academy Training Centre
- Alumni
- Academic Funding
- NEWS
- EVENTS
- PUBLICATIONS
- LIBRARY