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Poverty and Shame A study in eight countries

Poverty and Shame A study in eight countries. Elaine Chase Sohail Choudhry Frederick Golooba-Mutebi Erika Gubrium Ivar Lødemel JO Yong-Mie (Nicola) Leemamol Mathew Sony Pellissery Robert Walker YAN Ming. Research and policy context: Towards a global conversation.

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Poverty and Shame A study in eight countries

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  1. Poverty and ShameA study in eight countries Elaine Chase SohailChoudhry Frederick Golooba-Mutebi Erika Gubrium IvarLødemel JO Yong-Mie (Nicola) Leemamol Mathew Sony Pellissery Robert Walker YAN Ming

  2. Research and policy context:Towards a global conversation • A globalised world • Global governance • Need to develop a global language • Of concepts • Not necessarily of words

  3. Bridging languages • Conceptual Equivalence– whether word means the same thing • Functional Equivalence– whether the thing means the same, socially – causes and consequences; culturally – role and importance • Metric Equivalence– whether differences in degree are similarly registered • Political Equivalence– whether it is accorded similar priority

  4. Towards a global language of poverty? • Absolute or relative? • Need or rights? • Poverty felt as shame?

  5. Poverty rates in India, China and UK, 1990-2003

  6. Poverty rate: absolute/relative Source: China: Appleton, Song and Xia (2006) UK: DWP (2007)

  7. Poverty rate: absolute/relative Source: China: Appleton, Song and Xia (2006) UK: DWP (2007)

  8. Poverty rate: absolute/relative Source: China: Appleton, Song and Xia (2006) UK: DWP (2007)

  9. Human rights • Distinction is made between rights and needs. • Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) • Is poverty • a per se violation of human rights or • a cause of human rights violations • No right to be free from poverty • Individual needs impose no obligations on governments • Rights do. • ‘A right is something to which one is entitled solely by virtue of being a person. It is that which enables an individual to live with dignity’ (UNDP, 2003, p.1).

  10. Human rights • Distinction is made between rights and needs. • Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) • Is poverty • a per se violation of human rights or • a cause of human rights violations • No right to be free from poverty • UN Millennium Declaration • Affirmation of the fundamental rights and freedoms of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights

  11. Human rights • Distinction is made between rights and needs. • Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) • Is poverty • a per se violation of human rights or • a cause of human rights violations? • No right to be free from poverty

  12. Human rights • Distinction is made between rights and needs. • Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) • Is poverty • a per se violation of human rights or • a cause of human rights violations? • No right to be free from poverty • International Covenant on Economic • Social and Cultural Rights • Recognises a right to an adequate standard of living

  13. Shame &Amartya Sen Functionings: the facilities and resources required to enable people to achieve their capabilities Functionings Capabilities Capabilities: the potential that people have to lead fulfilled and engaging lives

  14. Shame &Amartya Sen Shame Functionings: the facilities and resources required to enable people to achieve their capabilities Functionings ‘irreducible absolutist core in the idea of poverty’ is ‘the ability to go about without shame’ Capabilities Capabilities: the potential that people have to lead fulfilled and engaging lives

  15. Universality of shame?‘voices of the poor’ Children in Bangladesh, India and Moldova feel ‘marked’ by shabby clothing An unemployed father in Guinea-Bissau feels ashamed at being unable adequately to feed his children People in Armenia feel a lack of self-worth and loss of status at being unable to maintain basic hygiene Poverty in Madagascar is equated with the inability to adhere to local customs and norms In Britain, the word poverty itself is considered to be stigmatising and is shunned In Europe and North America poverty is experienced as personal failure in achievement-orientated societies Is the shame attached to poverty universal and invariant? The Voices of the Poor study (Narayan et al., 2000a, b)

  16. Universality of shame?Evidence from scholarship • Shame is more prominent in collectivistic cultural societies than in individualistic ones (violation of social values) (pro: Benedict (1946), against Eid & Diener, 2001) • Shame is a salient emotion in Confucian societies. Avoiding shame/losing face is of overriding concern (Ho et al., 2004) • Linguistic representation of shame, guilt, and embarrassment is far richer in Chinese than in English (Wang & Fischer, 1994) • Shame is experienced similarly across cultures as a generalised negative view of self involving feelings of inferiority, powerlessness and lack of dignity (Fontaine, 2006)

  17. Why shame is important:conceptual equivalence? • It may be how poverty is actually experienced/felt • It is unpleasant, the opposite of well-being; ill-being: • Painful self-scrutiny leading to • a sense of shrinking, of "being small” • feelings of worthlessness and powerlessness. • Shame often leads to a desire to escape or to hide—to sink into the floor and disappear • Shame comes - in ‘losing face, failure and rejection by others’ - from the rejection of self, which may reach into the core of one’s being

  18. Why shame is important:metric equivalence? • If shame is universally associated with poverty and poverty invariably experienced as shame.....then... • It may provide an equivalent concept and metric for global discourse on poverty at differing levels of economic development.

  19. Why is shame important:functional equivalence? • Because shame may be experienced in conditions over which we have no control, personal responsibility is not necessarily involved – there may be no escape • ‘Shame is potentially more pervasive and incapacitating than guilt. It often persists like a psychic scar that stubbornly refuses to heal’ (Ho et al., 2004) • Impacts on agency, health, welfare, disability and rehabilitation

  20. The poverty/shame nexus? Moldova Poor people ‘are like garbage that everyone wants to get rid of.’ Argentina and Bulgaria Poor women are greater risk of sexual and physical abuse India Poor children are stigmatized by their teachers Kyrgyz Republic A young girl is called a ‘beggar’ for wearing clothing from humanitarian aid. Britain and US People view those who are poor as feckless or dishonest. Voices of the Poor (Narayan et al., 2000a, b) Shame (ashamed) Lack of agency Low self worth Poverty Social exclusion Low social capital Shaming Society

  21. The poverty/shame nexus? • Kenya • Women and youths are ‘treated worse than dogs’ at health clinics • Bangladesh • Dishonest officials discriminate against people in poverty who could not afford to offer bribes • Ukraine • Humiliation experienced at the unemployment office is ‘designed to chase the unemployed away’ • Russia • ‘Even the most needy are humiliated by having to take poor quality goods provided by the welfare office’. • Europe • Some social assistance and activation policies are stigmatising and reduce take-up • Voices of the Poor (Narayan et al., 2000a, b) Shame (ashamed) Lack of agency Low self worth Poverty Social exclusion Low social capital Shaming Shaming Society POLICY

  22. Research goal and objectives • To explore the role of policy in influencing any possible relationship between poverty and shame in diverse cultural settings • China, Germany, India, Norway, Pakistan, South Korea, United Kingdom, Uganda In order to achieve this, it is necessary: • To explore cultural conceptions/construction of shame • To explore if shame is associated with poverty • To explore how the general population conceptualise poverty and if they consciously or otherwise engage in the shaming of the poor • To examine if, and if so how, poor people experience shame • To examine how structure/delivery of policy might create or ameliorate poverty-induced shame

  23. 4 3 2 Engaging with the poor Perspectives of general public Policy analysis Research design Today 1 Cultural conceptions of poverty

  24. Conclusions • New hypothesis: • Poverty is/has not always been associated with shame • Traditional: Where poverty seen as fate, poor cannot be blamed for their poverty • Modernisation: Where economic success is expected, those who are unsuccessful risk being held responsible for there own poverty. • A common strategy CCTs is shame people into changing their ways. • Shame-poverty nexus is likely to strengthen with increasing marketisation and globalisation. • If poverty-shame nexus is strong and universal: • It suggests a shared poverty experience across the global South and North • Poverty-associated shame as a universal metric offers cultural, conceptual, functional, political equivalence • A global language for policy discourse • It explains how poverty inhibits economic growth • If shame is antonym of dignity, connects the social right to inclusion with the human right to dignity. • Suggests that anti-poverty programmes that create/reinforce shame could prove counterproductive • Points to best-practice principles for policy design in the global South and North.

  25. 4 3 2 Engaging with the poor Perspectives of general public Policy analysis Research design Conceptual equivalence Functional equivalence 1 Cultural conceptions of poverty

  26. Poverty and shame in EnglishConceptual equivalence

  27. Shame in Chinese:Conceptual equivalence • Shame is normally translated into a two-character compound chiru 恥辱 • Chi 恥 is made up of a pictographic component: • er: 耳(ear, hearing) • and an ideographic component: • xin 心(heart), meaning ashamed or humiliation • Ru 辱 • 1. defile or stain • 2. shame • 3. wronged or injustice.

  28. Shame in Chinese:Conceptual equivalence • Shame is normally translated into a two-character compound chiru 恥辱 • Chi 恥 is made up of a pictographic component: • er: 耳(ear, hearing) • and an ideographic component: • xin 心(heart), meaning ashamed or humiliation • Ru 辱 • 1. defile or stain • 2. shame • 3. wronged or injustice.

  29. Shame in Chinese:Conceptual equivalence • Shame is normally translated into a two-character compound chiru 恥辱 • Chi 恥 is made up of a pictographic component: • er: 耳(ear, hearing) • and an ideographic component: • xin 心(heart), meaning ashamed or humiliation • Ru 辱 • 1. defile or stain • 2. shame • 3. wronged or injustice.

  30. Poverty in Chinese • Poverty usually translated as pin qiong 贫穷 or pin kun 贫困 • pin贫contains two components: • bei贝 from seashell and represents assets • fen分division • So pin贫 means a shortage of assets resulting from division • Qiong 穷 means “utmost”. • Among the nearly 300 words containing qiong 穷, most relevant are: • 1. equivalent to pin 贫; • 2. extremely poor or without any assets • 3. widower, widow, orphan, and lone elderly • 4. desolate, wicked, etc. • Kun 困 often combined with pin to refer to poverty. • Kun originally meant an abandoned house, and evolved to relate to exhaustion, haggard, helpless, limited.

  31. Poverty in Chinese • Poverty usually translated as pin qiong 贫穷 or pin kun 贫困 • pin贫contains two components: • bei贝 from seashell and represents assets • fen分division • So pin贫 means a shortage of assets resulting from division • Qiong 穷 means “utmost”. • Among the nearly 300 words containing qiong 穷, most relevant are: • 1. equivalent to pin 贫; • 2. extremely poor or without any assets • 3. widower, widow, orphan, and lone elderly • 4. desolate, wicked, etc. • Kun 困 often combined with pin to refer to poverty. • Kun originally meant an abandoned house, and evolved to relate to exhaustion, haggard, helpless, limited.

  32. Poverty in Chinese • Poverty usually translated as pin qiong 贫穷 or pin kun 贫困 • pin贫contains two components: • bei贝 from seashell and represents assets • fen分division • So pin贫 means a shortage of assets resulting from division • Qiong 穷 means “utmost”. • Among the nearly 300 words containing qiong 穷, most relevant are: • 1. equivalent to pin 贫; • 2. extremely poor or without any assets • 3. widower, widow, orphan, and lone elderly • 4. desolate, wicked, etc. • Kun 困 often combined with pin to refer to poverty. • Kun originally meant an abandoned house, and evolved to relate to exhaustion, haggard, helpless, limited.

  33. Functional equivalence - Pakistan:Purposive sample of Poets and Prose (short story writers) of Urdu

  34. Urdu specimens: Nazeer Akbarabadi (1740-1830)

  35. Poverty and Shame Themes Socio-Psychological Issues There are various themes that have emerged from the review of Urdu literature. For the ease of analysis and discussion, they have been categorised under five major groups, as shown on the left. Distress of Poverty and Shame Shame, dignity and Self Respect Socio-political thoughts Diversity of Opinions

  36. Poverty and Shame Themes Approach or withdrawal response An effort to redress before retreat or withdrawal. Painful exposure of shame / Inadequacy Shame is painful in hiding but more so in exposure. Socio-Psychological Issues Distress of Poverty and Shame Shame, dignity and Self Respect Poverty shame affects judgement, behaviour, feelings Poverty shame affects participation Material well being, Inferiority feelings, Apprehensions. Socio-political thoughts Diversity of Opinions

  37. Poverty and Shame Themes Approach or withdrawal response An effort to redress before retreat or withdrawal. Painful exposure of shame / Inadequacy Shame is painful in hiding but more so in exposure. Socio-Psychological Issues Distress of Poverty and Shame Shame, dignity and Self Respect Poverty shame affects judgement, behaviour, feelings Poverty shame affects participation Material well being, Inferiority feelings, Apprehensions. Socio-political thoughts Diversity of Opinions

  38. Poverty and Shame Themes • Harshness of Poverty • Structural Issues • Beyond control • No Hope • Fatalistic approach • Death seen as the only • escape from the trap • Poverty of ambition Socio-Psychological Issues Distress of Poverty and Shame Shame, dignity and Self Respect • Inequality of the Poor • Socio-economic • Cultural aspects • Resentment & anger • Anti social behaviour • Smoking, drugs • Reaction against the • rich Socio-political thoughts Diversity of Opinions

  39. Poverty and Shame Themes • Poetry vs. Prose • Absolute poverty • Poverty shame affects dignity / self respect • Conflicting thoughts • Temporary spells of poverty. Poverty and Shamelessness Socio-Psychological Issues Distress of Poverty and Shame Shame, dignity and Self Respect Material well being is respected Iqbal’s philosophy There is no pride in starving / being poor Rebuking Sufism Socio-political thoughts Diversity of Opinions

  40. Poverty and Shame Themes • Contentment is respected • Relative poverty • In absolute poverty, it conflicts with lack of ambition / action. Poor but generous Of the heart, ideas, love, warmth, hospitality. Socio-Psychological Issues Distress of Poverty and Shame Shame, dignity and Self Respect • Cultural aspects • Positive shame; modesty, courtesy, shyness etc. • Family, relationships and individuality. • Shame of lineage • and identity • Caste system • Humble background • Shame of poverty • seems to follow Socio-political thoughts Diversity of Opinions

  41. Poverty and Shame Themes • Contentment is respected • Relative poverty • In absolute poverty, it conflicts with lack of ambition / action. Poor but generous Of the heart, ideas, love, warmth, hospitality. Socio-Psychological Issues Distress of Poverty and Shame Shame, dignity and Self Respect • Cultural aspects • Positive shame; modesty, courtesy, shyness etc. • Family, relationships and individuality. • Shame of lineage • and identity • Caste system • Humble background • Shame of poverty • seems to follow Socio-political thoughts Diversity of Opinions

  42. ChinaPoverty without shame • Pre-modern Chinese society • Ascribed status with little possibility for upward mobility, means people have no choice but to accept their economic and social situation • Justified through Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism – Karma: • when you are alive, you are a poor person; when dead, you are a poor ghost (Xiao Hong, 646). • when a poor person dies, they may be reborn into a wealthy family (Han Shaogong). • Communist Revolutionary China • Poverty is located in the perspective of class struggle; the suffering of people in poverty is caused by the wealthy; • The poor were told to take pride in their identity: • the poor of the whole world belongs to one family, and we all have the same last name ‘the poor’; (390) • “mud stuck with mud makes a wall; the poor help the poor to become the king.” (103)

  43. India:“Kadha Parayumbol”, 2007 “Kadha Parayumbol” tells the plight of a poor “barber” who lives with his wife and three children in a village called Melukavu, of Kerala. Barber Balan (Sreenivasan) is struggling to survive in his traditional profession, as he cannot find anyone who would give him a loan to upgrade his “barber shop” without taking a bribe

  44. India:“Kadha Parayumbol” • Harshness of poverty • Embarrassment • Anguish of a poor housewife/mother • Facial and other body signs of poverty induced shame • Guilt for not earning enough • Humiliation at home • Ashamed to borrow money • Unnecessary pride • Aspirations for getting higher in business • Defensive behavior of the poor • Self-conscious behaviors •  “abhimani” – imply that poor has least right to have self-respect and honor Balan comes home. Sreedevi (Balan’s wife) greets him. Sreedevi: You haven’t got fish? Balan: (embarrassingly) I didn’t see fish when I reached the junction. Sreedevi: Then, did you get vegetables? Balan: No, I thought of making some chicken today. Sreedevi: Then, did you get chicken? Balan : (embarrassed) chicken, …. Here…and …there…. Sreedevi: our own chicken, I won’t allow. Oh, God! What will I give to children when they come home with empty stomach? Balan: Now, let me decide if you love children or chicken more. Sreedevi: Both are same to me. Today Sonamol (eldest daughter) was very sad to go to school. Balan: Why? What happened? Sreedevi: Today was the last date to pay her fees, and she’ll be out of the class if she fails to pay the same. For Seena and Sathyan, its okay, but Sona is in the 10th Standard. We need to remember that. Balan: (head down with guilt and embarrassment) I need to get a new scissor and a revolving chair urgently. I heard that Eappachan has a huge “Angilee maram” tree in his land, which may be good for making a revolving chair. I’ll go there today. Sreedevi: whats the use of that? He won’t give wood without money. Moreover, he is a money lender who takes high interest. Balan: Now I’ll have a look at the tree and‘ll buy when I get money. Sreedevi: When will that be? Balan: aaatthe….. (mumbles). Sreedevi: Your pocket is empty, and that’s the reason you’ve not bought fish. Is it so? Couldn’t you borrow 10 rupees from someone in the next shop? Oh, you will not borrow; you are someone with too much of pride (“abhimani”). You know it is how many days since we bought some grocery. There’s nothing at home.

  45. UK“All or nothing”, 2002 An apparently dysfunctional family comprising: Phil an apparently lazy but depressed tax-driver; long-term cohabitee Pen, working as a supermarket cashier; an obese silent daughter working as a cleaner in a care home; and an obese son, working age, but unemployed and not looking for work, come together as a consequence of the son suffering a heart attack. The alienation of mundane lives pressurised by limited income causes them to live alongside each other at a high pitch of anger and inner loneliness.

  46. UK“All or nothing”, 2002 Not having enough money, need to borrow Humiliation of asking daughter and wife, entering their bedrooms. Wife’s response is to make him feel inadequate Later transpires that he feels hated, not respected, ‘spoken to like a piece of shit’. Vulnerability to risk has a connection with vulnerability to shame. Scene: Phil looks for coins down side of sofa; in little pots on the mantlepiece. Goes at bedtime into daughter Rachel’s room: ‘Got any spare change..its me whatsaname tomorrow (rent for taxi radio)? I gotta pay it..I don’t na leave you short’ Goes to wife in bed reading, ‘I ain’t had a very good week’ Penny (wife’) ‘Ain’t ya’ Phil ‘No....got any spare? Penny ‘I gotta bit bit, but it ain’t really spare is it? Phil: ‘Can I borrow some, I’ll pay you back at the weekend’ Penny: ‘Why don’t you get up earlier in the morning..drive people to work, take ‘em to the airport Later Phil trying to return Penny her money at 3 in the morning He tries to repay her, but since she is half asleep, she tells Phil not to do it at that time. He still says that he would put them on the sideboard.

  47. Conclusions • If poverty-shame nexus is strong and universal: • It suggests a shared poverty experience across the global South and North • Poverty-associated shame as a universal metric offers cultural, conceptual, functional, political equivalence • A global language for policy discourse • It explains how poverty inhibits economic growth • If shame is antonym of dignity, connects the social right to inclusion with the human right to dignity. • Suggests that anti-poverty programmes that create/reinforce shame could prove counterproductive • Points to best-practice principles for policy design in the global South and North. It is not as straight forward as one might think

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