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The TG “Poverty and Well-being as a (local) Institutional Process” focuses on concrete human beings as both the “prime movers” and the final “beneficiaries” of development. It is the institutional environment in its concrete local manifestations that fundamentally shapes opportunities and constraints faced by specific groups of people in the development process. The TG analyses this environment as a set of social networks and organizations that allow people to call upon the cooperation of fellow human beings, as a set of rules and norms that determine which resources can be accessed by whom and which actions are socially (un)acceptable in function of each person’s identity, and as a set of cultural heuristics used by people to assemble their identities and lifeworlds. A key theoretical claim is that poverty is not an attribute of certain people (the “poor”), but the result of a particular social situation produced, re-produced (and potentially changed) by local institutional processes.
The research of the TG can be summarized as actor-oriented institutional analysis, trying to capture the complex interactions between human agency and the local institutional environment. The focus is policy-oriented, i.e. the TG wants to grasp the above mentioned interactions in order to design better policies and intervention to promote aggregate development and reduce social exclusion and poverty. The policy process and the interventions by the “development industry” are an integral part of the prevailing institutional dynamics and thus inevitably marked by social exclusion. The challenge is thus to promote change processes from within the existing exclusionary and inefficient institutional realities of poverty-stricken areas. In more operational terms, the TG envisages the study of livelihood strategies in local institutional context, (the lack of) responsiveness and accountability of public services, the institutional conditions for (better) functioning and more accessible markets (value chains, micro-finance) and problems of local organization and collective action.
Click here for full information on the TG's activities.
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Financial
Diaries Research Team
In
September 2010, one of the junior researchers of the thematic group
Poverty and Well-Being as a Local Institutional Process started a
research project on Financial Diaries. These Diaries are based on
frequent recordings of families' financial practices, including how
they earn, spend, loan and save their money. For a year, a local
research team succesfully recorded the practices of 16 families in Muy
Muy, Nicaragua. During the project's evaluation on the 25th of
September of 2011 the researchers were presented with their diplomas.
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