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OverviewProviding extensive surveys on the most recently developed themes of individual and social well-being, this Handbook offers a comprehensive treatment of less traditional approaches to empirical and theoretical research. The novel complementary perspective by which each topic is addressed presents a broader outlook on the various dimensions of inequality and well-being. Each topic is assessed through two accompanying chapters: first, a detailed study of the theoretical approaches, followed by a supporting chapter of empirical findings. The original contributions cover themes ranging from human development to social exclusion, and from going beyond GDP as the primary indicator of progress to evaluating the persistence of poverty. The chapters also address measures of vulnerability and economic insecurity. The Handbook emphasizes the distributional aspects of inequalities across different groups through the analysis of polarization, segregation, and social fractionalization. This is an excellent Handbook for postgraduates and researchers in the social sciences and economics. The contributions rethink some of the traditional theories and models for measuring inequality and well-being, and push the boundaries for future research. The policy-relevant insights will also be of great use for social policy professionals and analysts. Contributors include: C. Balestra, L. Bellani, R. Boarini, C. Calvo, B. Cantillon, O. Canto, L. Ceriani, S. Chakravarty, N. Chattopadhyhay, M. Ciommi, C. del Rio, I. Dutta, A. Fusco, A. Gábos, C. Gigliarano, E. Giovannini, T. Goedemé, C. Gradin, A.-C. Guio, M. Hoy, C. Lasso de la Vega, R. Mora, L. Osberg, N. Rohde, T. Rondinella, N. Ruiz, E. Savaglio, S. Seth, J. Silber, K.K. Tang, I. Tóth, S. Vannucci, P. Verme, A. Villar, O. Volij, G. Yalonetzky, B. Zheng Full Product DetailsAuthor: Conchita D’AmbrosioPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd ISBN: 9781781953709ISBN 10: 1781953708 Pages: 608 Publication Date: 30 March 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents: Introduction by Conchita D’Ambrosio 1. Going Beyond GDP: Theoretical Approaches Enrico Giovannini and Tommaso Rondinella 2. Going Beyond GDP: Empirical Findings Carlotta Balestra, Romina Boarini and Nicolas Ruiz 3. Human Development and Poverty: Theoretical Approaches Suman Seth and Antonio Villar 4. Human Development and Poverty: Empirical Findings Suman Seth and Antonio Villar 5. Multidimensional Poverty and Material Deprivation: Theoretical Approaches Satya R. Chakravarty and Nachiketa Chattopadhyay 6. Multidimensional Poverty and Material Deprivation: Empirical Findings Anne-Catherine Guio 7. Social Exclusion: Theoretical Approaches Luna Bellani and Alessio Fusco 8. Social Exclusion: Empirical Findings Bea Cantillon, András Gábos, Tim Goedemé and István György Tóth 9. Poverty Over Time: Theoretical Approaches Michael Hoy and Buhong Zheng 10. Poverty Over Time: Empirical Findings Carlos Gradin, Olga Cantó and Coral del Rio 11. Vulnerability to Poverty: Theoretical Approaches Cesar Calvo 12. Vulnerability to Poverty: Empirical Findings Lidia Ceriani 13. Economic Insecurity: Theoretical Approaches Nicholas Rohde and Kam Ki Tang 14. Economic Insecurity: Empirical Findings Lars Osberg 15. Relative Deprivation and Satisfaction: Theoretical Approaches Lucio Esposito 16. Relative Deprivation and Satisfaction: Empirical Findings Paolo Verme 17. Social Inequality: Theoretical Approaches Casilda Lasso de la Vega 18. Social Inequality: Empirical Findings Indranil Dutta and Gaston Yalonetzky 19. Income and Social Polarization: Theoretical Approaches Iñaki Permanyer 20. Income and Social Polarization: Empirical Findings Chiara Gigliarano 21. Segregation: Theoretical Approaches Oscar Volij 22. Segregation: Empirical Findings Ricardo Mora and Jacques Silber 23. Diversity and Social Fractionalization: Theoretical Approaches Mariateresa Ciommi, Ernesto Savaglio and Stefano Vannucci 24. Diversity and Social Fractionalization: Empirical Findings Mariateresa Ciommi IndexReviewsThis volume contains an excellent collection of chapters by outstanding economists on the subject of social and economic well-being. Among the authors are Lars Osberg, Carlos Gradin, Olga Canto, and Jacques Silber, with a first-rate overview provided by Conchita D'Ambrosio. The chapters are paired, with a theoretical analysis followed by an empirical implementation. Topics include well-being measures going beyond GDP, human development and poverty, multidimensional poverty and material deprivation, social exclusion, economic insecurity, relative deprivation and satisfaction, social inequality, social polarization, and segregation.' --Edward N. Wolff, New York University, US'This Handbook updates and modernizes decades of scholarship on macro-level markers of progress and micro-level measures of well-being. Its main contribution is its insistence on integrating non-traditional frameworks into conventional approaches to defining, measuring, and tracking socio-economic outcomes at multiple levels. This sophisticated collection spans a remarkable array of outcomes, dimensions, and indicators, including poverty, deprivation, development, exclusion, polarization, segregation, diversity, vulnerability, insecurity, and satisfaction. D'Ambrosio's ambitious decision to pair theoretical and empirical analyses of each topic pays off beautifully.' --Janet C. Gornick, City University of New York, Graduate Center, US `This Handbook is useful for undergraduates and those who want to understand the social sciences and economics in relevance to well-beings. The Handbook enhances the understanding of theories and models for measuring inequality and well-being.' -- Mohamad Buheji, International Journal of Inspiration & Resilience Economy `This Handbook updates and modernizes decades of scholarship on macro-level markers of progress and micro-level measures of well-being. Its main contribution is its insistence on integrating non-traditional frameworks into conventional approaches to defining, measuring, and tracking socio-economic outcomes at multiple levels. This sophisticated collection spans a remarkable array of outcomes, dimensions, and indicators, including poverty, deprivation, development, exclusion, polarization, segregation, diversity, vulnerability, insecurity, and satisfaction. D'Ambrosio's ambitious decision to pair theoretical and empirical analyses of each topic pays off beautifully.' -- Janet C. Gornick, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, US `This volume contains an excellent collection of chapters by outstanding economists on the subject of social and economic well-being. Among the authors are Lars Osberg, Carlos Gradin, Olga Canto, and Jacques Silber, with a first-rate overview provided by Conchita D'Ambrosio. The chapters are paired, with a theoretical analysis followed by an empirical implementation. Topics include well-being measures going beyond GDP, human development and poverty, multidimensional poverty and material deprivation, social exclusion, economic insecurity, relative deprivation and satisfaction, social inequality, social polarization, and segregation.' -- Edward N. Wolff, New York University, US 'The Handbook provides the readership with an update of research on macro-level conditions and micro-level measures of well-being. The book contributes to the debate by introducing non-conventional and non-traditional approaches into a field not seldom criticised of being too conventional, too outcome-oriented and too modest with respect to political demands. The Handbook deserves a broad audience of students, graduates and researchers in the field of social sciences, social work and social pedagogy.' -- Niels Rosendal Jensen, European Journal of Social Work 'This Handbook is useful for undergraduates and those who want to understand the social sciences and economics in relevance to well-beings. The Handbook enhances the understanding of theories and models for measuring inequality and well-being.' -- Mohamad Buheji, International Journal of Inspiration & Resilience Economy 'This Handbook updates and modernizes decades of scholarship on macro-level markers of progress and micro-level measures of well-being. Its main contribution is its insistence on integrating non-traditional frameworks into conventional approaches to defining, measuring, and tracking socio-economic outcomes at multiple levels. This sophisticated collection spans a remarkable array of outcomes, dimensions, and indicators, including poverty, deprivation, development, exclusion, polarization, segregation, diversity, vulnerability, insecurity, and satisfaction. D'Ambrosio's ambitious decision to pair theoretical and empirical analyses of each topic pays off beautifully.' -- Janet C. Gornick, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, US 'This volume contains an excellent collection of chapters by outstanding economists on the subject of social and economic well-being. Among the authors are Lars Osberg, Carlos Gradin, Olga Canto, and Jacques Silber, with a first-rate overview provided by Conchita D'Ambrosio. The chapters are paired, with a theoretical analysis followed by an empirical implementation. Topics include well-being measures going beyond GDP, human development and poverty, multidimensional poverty and material deprivation, social exclusion, economic insecurity, relative deprivation and satisfaction, social inequality, social polarization, and segregation.' -- Edward N. Wolff, New York University, US `This Handbook updates and modernizes decades of scholarship on macro-level markers of progress and micro-level measures of well-being. Its main contribution is its insistence on integrating non-traditional frameworks into conventional approaches to defining, measuring, and tracking socio-economic outcomes at multiple levels. This sophisticated collection spans a remarkable array of outcomes, dimensions, and indicators, including poverty, deprivation, development, exclusion, polarization, segregation, diversity, vulnerability, insecurity, and satisfaction. D'Ambrosio's ambitious decision to pair theoretical and empirical analyses of each topic pays off beautifully.' -- Janet C. Gornick, City University of New York, US `This volume contains an excellent collection of chapters by outstanding economists on the subject of social and economic well-being. Among the authors are Lars Osberg, Carlos Gradin, Olga Canto, and Jacques Silber, with a first-rate overview provided by Conchita D'Ambrosio. The chapters are paired, with a theoretical analysis followed by an empirical implementation. Topics include well-being measures going beyond GDP, human development and poverty, multidimensional poverty and material deprivation, social exclusion, economic insecurity, relative deprivation and satisfaction, social inequality, social polarization, and segregation.' -- Edward N. Wolff, New York University, US This volume contains an excellent collection of chapters by outstanding economists on the subject of social and economic well-being. Among the authors are Lars Osberg, Carlos Gradin, Olga Canto, and Jacques Silber, with a first-rate overview provided by Conchita D'Ambrosio. The chapters are paired, with a theoretical analysis followed by an empirical implementation. Topics include well-being measures going beyond GDP, human development and poverty, multidimensional poverty and material deprivation, social exclusion, economic insecurity, relative deprivation and satisfaction, social inequality, social polarization, and segregation.' --Edward N. Wolff, New York University, US'This Handbook updates and modernizes decades of scholarship on macro-level markers of progress and micro-level measures of well-being. Its main contribution is its insistence on integrating non-traditional frameworks into conventional approaches to defining, measuring, and tracking socio-economic outcomes at multiple levels. This sophisticated collection spans a remarkable array of outcomes, dimensions, and indicators, including poverty, deprivation, development, exclusion, polarization, segregation, diversity, vulnerability, insecurity, and satisfaction. D'Ambrosio's ambitious decision to pair theoretical and empirical analyses of each topic pays off beautifully.' --Janet C. Gornick, City University of New York, Graduate Center, US 'This Handbook is useful for undergraduates and those who want to understand the social sciences and economics in relevance to well-beings. The Handbook enhances the understanding of theories and models for measuring inequality and well-being.' -- Mohamad Buheji, International Journal of Inspiration & Resilience Economy 'This Handbook updates and modernizes decades of scholarship on macro-level markers of progress and micro-level measures of well-being. Its main contribution is its insistence on integrating non-traditional frameworks into conventional approaches to defining, measuring, and tracking socio-economic outcomes at multiple levels. This sophisticated collection spans a remarkable array of outcomes, dimensions, and indicators, including poverty, deprivation, development, exclusion, polarization, segregation, diversity, vulnerability, insecurity, and satisfaction. D'Ambrosio's ambitious decision to pair theoretical and empirical analyses of each topic pays off beautifully.' -- Janet C. Gornick, The Graduate Center, City University of New York, US 'This volume contains an excellent collection of chapters by outstanding economists on the subject of social and economic well-being. Among the authors are Lars Osberg, Carlos Gradin, Olga Canto, and Jacques Silber, with a first-rate overview provided by Conchita D'Ambrosio. The chapters are paired, with a theoretical analysis followed by an empirical implementation. Topics include well-being measures going beyond GDP, human development and poverty, multidimensional poverty and material deprivation, social exclusion, economic insecurity, relative deprivation and satisfaction, social inequality, social polarization, and segregation.' -- Edward N. Wolff, New York University, US Author InformationEdited by Conchita D’Ambrosio, Université du Luxembourg Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |