Adaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.

The idea that people adapt to poverty and deprivation by suppressing their wants, hopes and aspirations has gained a lot of currency in development ethics. While the ‘adaptation problem’ is often cited as one of the primary arguments for abandoning utility based concepts of well-being in favour of t...

Disgrifiad llawn

Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awdur: Clark, D
Fformat: Working paper
Iaith:English
Cyhoeddwyd: GPRG 2007
_version_ 1826276954788069376
author Clark, D
author_facet Clark, D
author_sort Clark, D
collection OXFORD
description The idea that people adapt to poverty and deprivation by suppressing their wants, hopes and aspirations has gained a lot of currency in development ethics. While the ‘adaptation problem’ is often cited as one of the primary arguments for abandoning utility based concepts of well-being in favour of the capability approach, it also has serious implications for the capability approach and development studies generally. These implications are not normally discussed or acknowledged in the well-being and development literature. Fortunately for development studies, the available evidence suggests that adaptation is not ubiquitous. Moreover, where adaptation occurs, there is some evidence to suggest that it takes a different – and far less damaging – form than the type discussed in work on human well-being and development.programme of the ESRC Global Poverty Research Group
first_indexed 2024-03-06T23:21:37Z
format Working paper
id oxford-uuid:68e9a5cb-a228-46f3-bbea-2173de864baf
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T23:21:37Z
publishDate 2007
publisher GPRG
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:68e9a5cb-a228-46f3-bbea-2173de864baf2022-03-26T18:48:08ZAdaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.Working paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:68e9a5cb-a228-46f3-bbea-2173de864bafEnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsGPRG2007Clark, DThe idea that people adapt to poverty and deprivation by suppressing their wants, hopes and aspirations has gained a lot of currency in development ethics. While the ‘adaptation problem’ is often cited as one of the primary arguments for abandoning utility based concepts of well-being in favour of the capability approach, it also has serious implications for the capability approach and development studies generally. These implications are not normally discussed or acknowledged in the well-being and development literature. Fortunately for development studies, the available evidence suggests that adaptation is not ubiquitous. Moreover, where adaptation occurs, there is some evidence to suggest that it takes a different – and far less damaging – form than the type discussed in work on human well-being and development.programme of the ESRC Global Poverty Research Group
spellingShingle Clark, D
Adaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.
title Adaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.
title_full Adaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.
title_fullStr Adaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.
title_full_unstemmed Adaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.
title_short Adaptation, Poverty and Well-Being: Some Issues and Observations with Special Reference to the Capability Approach and Development Studies.
title_sort adaptation poverty and well being some issues and observations with special reference to the capability approach and development studies
work_keys_str_mv AT clarkd adaptationpovertyandwellbeingsomeissuesandobservationswithspecialreferencetothecapabilityapproachanddevelopmentstudies