Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Identifying Disadvantaged Children: Comparing Alternative Approaches Melissa Wong and Peter Saunders Social Policy Research Centre University of New South.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Identifying Disadvantaged Children: Comparing Alternative Approaches Melissa Wong and Peter Saunders Social Policy Research Centre University of New South."— Presentation transcript:

1 Identifying Disadvantaged Children: Comparing Alternative Approaches Melissa Wong and Peter Saunders Social Policy Research Centre University of New South Wales Presented to the 2 nd International Conference of the International Society for Child Indicators University of Western Sydney, 4-5 November 2009

2 Dimensions of Social Disadvantage  Poverty – people are living in poverty if their incomes are so inadequate as to preclude them from having an acceptable standard of living (Irish Combat Poverty Agency)  Deprivation – people are deprived when they face an enforced lack of socially perceived necessities (Mack and Lansley, Poor Britain)  Social exclusion – ‘An individual is socially excluded if he or she does not [have the opportunity to] participate in key activities in the society in which he or she lives’ (Burchardt, Le Grand and Piachaud, Understanding Social Exclusion)  Consistent poverty – income below 60% of the median and also experiencing enforced deprivation (Irish Combat Poverty Agency)

3 The UNICEF Child Well-being Framework  Dimensions of well-being: 1.Material well-being (poverty, deprivation, work) 2.Health and safety (mortality and morbidity) 3.Educational well-being (literacy, numeracy and enrolments) 4.Family and peer relationships (sole parent and step families) 5.Behaviours and risks (smoking, violence and physical activity) 6.Subjective well-being (perceptions of belonging and loneliness)

4 The ARACY Report Card of Wellbeing for Australian Children and Youth  Dimensions of well-being: 1.Material well-being (poverty, deprivation and joblessness) 2.Health and safety (health, immunisation, accidents/injury) 3.Educational well-being (school achievement and work transition) 4.Relationships (social capital, family relationships, belonging) 5.Behaviours and risks (obesity, smoking, alcohol, drug use, crime) 6.Subjective well-being (self-reported health, personal wellbeing) 7.Participation (community participation, political interest) 8.Environment (climate change, resource use and biodiversity)

5 Comparing the Three Approaches  (Income) poverty focuses on what people do not have (in terms of income)  Deprivation focuses on what people cannot afford (in terms of acquiring the essentials of life)  Social exclusion focuses on what people do not do (among customary or common activities) → Deprivation and exclusion focus more directly on the absence of items regarded as essential (“necessities”)

6 Identifying Deprivation and Exclusion Is it essential for everyone? Do you have it? SOCIAL EXCLUSIONYesNoYesNo THE ESSENTIALS OF LIFE Is it because you cannot afford it? YesNo DEPRIVATION

7 Community Understanding of Poverty and Social Exclusion Survey (CUPSE) 2006 (n=2,704) Benchmark 61 essential items; 47 considered to be essential by 50% of sample 26 Deprivation items27 Social exclusion items Child-related items: Hobby/leisure activities for children Children able to participate in school activities Annual dental check-up for children New school books/clothes Separate bed per child Separate bedroom per child >10 years Economic Exclusion -restricted access to economic resources and low economic capacity Service exclusion -lack of adequate access to key services Disengagement -lack of community participation

8 Essential items (without child-related items)

9 Essential items (with 6 child-related items) Bedroom per child >10 years New school books/clothes Annual dental check-up for children School activities Hobby for children Bed per child

10 Comparing Disadvantage by Family Types  3 family types: couples without children, couples with dependent children and sole parent with dependent children  Age of dependent child <18 years and age of parent restricted to ≤50 years  3 indicators of disadvantage – poverty, deprivation and social exclusion  Subjective wellbeing indicators

11 Income Poverty Rates by Family Type %

12 Deprivation of 25 essential items by Family Type %

13 Deprivation of 6 child-related items by Family Type %

14 Social Exclusion by Family Type % DisengagementService exclusionEconomic exclusion

15 % Consistent Poverty (60% median disposable income & dep ≥ 2)

16 Subjective Wellbeing by Family Type %

17 Conclusions  Examine nature of disadvantaged couple and sole parent families in Australia using poverty, deprivation and social exclusion indicators as well as subjective well-being indicators  Sole parent families are most disadvantaged in terms of all the indicators as well as subjective well-being  Couples with dependent children are worse off than couples with no children  Indicators are based on information provided by parents and not children themselves  There is a need for more research on children's experiences and attitudes [SPRC’s Making a Difference Project] Dr Melissa Wong | Social Policy Research Centre | melissa.wong@unsw.edu.au Professor Peter Saunders | Social Policy Research Centre | p.saunders@unsw.edu.au


Download ppt "Identifying Disadvantaged Children: Comparing Alternative Approaches Melissa Wong and Peter Saunders Social Policy Research Centre University of New South."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google