Draft
Draft
Child Poverty in
Times of Crisis
Salzburg, August 25 & 26, 2016
Keynote Speakers:
Mario Biggeri (Florence)
Lucinda Platt (LSE)
www.uni-salzburg.at/childpoverty2016
2 Salzburg, August 25 & 26, 2016
Welcome to Salzburg!
Salzburg is the fourth-largest city in Austria with about 150.000 inhabitants and
the capital city of the federal state of Salzburg. Its „Old Town“ (Altstadt) (listed
as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997) has internationally renowned baroque
architecture and a beautiful alpine setting. The most famous son of Salzburg is the
18th-century composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and many have seen and heard
the musical and film The Sound of Music. You can visit many different museums,
churches or the fortress Hohensalzburg, one of the largest medieval castles in Eu-
rope. But Salzburg is not only about culture and music, it also has three universities
and a large population of students.
Child Poverty in Times of Crisis 3
Organising Committee
Helmut P. Gaisbauer – Elisabeth Kapferer – Andreas Koch – Otto Neumaier
Gottfried Schweiger – Clemens Sedmak
Child Poverty in Times of Crisis 7
Thursday, August 25
Time Room Room
09.00 – 10.00 Registration
10.00 – 10.15 Welcome Kant
10.15 – 11.30 Opening Keynote: Kant
Mario Biggeri
11.30 – 12.00 Break
12.00 – 13.30 Session 1a Kant Session 1b Leibniz
13.30 – 14.30 Lunch
14.30 – 16.00 Session 2a Kant Session 2b Leibniz
16.00 – 16.30 Break
16.30 – 18.00 Session 3a Session 3b
18.00 Reception
Friday, August 26
09.00 – 10.30 City Tour
10.30 – 11.00 Break
11.00 – 12.30 Session 4a Kant Session 4b Leibniz
12.30 – 13.30 Lunch
13.30 – 15.00 Session 5a Kant Session 5b Leibniz
15.00 – 15.30 Break
15.30 – 17.00 Closing Keynote: Kant
Lucinda Platt
20.00 Conference Dinner
8 Salzburg, August 25 & 26, 2016
Schedule
Schedule
Marga Marí-Klose and Sandra Age, economic vulnerability and the Welfare
Escapa (University of Barcelona) State: social protection against child and old
age poverty
Linda Hewitt (Centre for Rese- An Assessment of Child Poverty: Implica-
arch & Development, Trinidad tions from Recent Oil Price Volatility Affec-
and Tobago) and Deborah Mc Fee ting a Small Oil Producing Economy
(University of the West Indies,
Trinidad)
Ides Nicaise (KU Leuven ) How inclusive are European ECEC systems?
The Impact of Institutional Settings of ECEC
on the Accessibility, Perceived Quality and
Use of Child Care by Disadvantaged Groups
Enrica Maria Martino (University Mother, worker, Italian: is that possible? Ma-
of Turin) ternal labor supply and perceved poverty af-
ter childbirth
Ronan van Rossem and Lieselot The effect of growing up poor on early child
De Keyser (University of Gent) development in Flanders – an analysis of
birth cohorts 2006 – 2009
10 Salzburg, August 25 & 26, 2016
Schedule
Athanasia Kleanthous – Kapa- Child poverty in the new era: The case of
kidou (University of Cyprus) Cyprus
Meral Kaufmann and Solinda Child Poverty and Human Rights in Basel
Morgillo (University of Basel)
Natália Fernandes (University of Childhood, crisis and active citizenship in
Minho), Gabriela Trevisan (ESE- Portugal
PF/CIPAF, CIEC/UM ) and Sérgio
Araújo (Polytechnic Institute of
Porto) and Catarina Tomás (Insti-
tute Polytechnic of Lisbon)
Schedule
Andreas Hirseland (Institute for Welfare State, activation policies and child
Employment Research), Florian poverty – how children and their parents
Engel and Ajit Singh (University perceive conditions of poverty
of Applied Sciences Fulda )
Simon Wigley (Bilkent Universi- Democracy and Child Mortality: Does Media
ty) and Arzu Akkoyunlu (Hacet- Freedom Make a Difference?
tepe University)
Mar Cabezas (University of Salz- Child Poverty as Potential Developmental
burg) and Carlos Pitillas (Univer- Trauma: Shame, Self-Esteem, and Redigini-
sidad de Comillas) fation of Childhood
Important Information
Conference Venue:
Centre for Ethics and
Poverty Research
Edith-Stein-Haus
Mönchsberg 2a
A-5020 Salzburg
Conference Dinner:
Die Stadtalm
Mönchsberg 19c
A-5020 Salzburg
Important Information
Meeting Point for the City Tour:
Toscaninihof
09.00 am on Friday
Emergency Numbers:
Fire Department: 122
Police: 133
Ambulance: 144
Organizing Committee
[email protected]
+43 (0) 662 8044 2570
14 Salzburg, August 25 & 26, 2016
Opening Keynote
Mario Biggeri (Department of Economics, University of Florence)
Closing Keynote
Lucinda platt (london school of economics and political science)
Abstracts
Angelina Höher
until January 2016 and more particular from in depth interviews with twenty chil-
dren between 8 to 13 years of age.
The data suggests that the children are robbed of their childhood since the
ramifications of the Occupation are real for adults and children alike. From the
observations in the field it also became clear that the children are aware of their
responsibility and thus constantly test the boundaries when it comes to ways of
dealing with the Occupation. It is precisely the everyday practices that fortify the
children’s sense of agency and resiliency despite the traumatic experiences they
encounter due to the Israeli Occupation and the structural poverty they are forced
into.
In sum, recognizing children’s everyday acts as meaningful acts of resistan-
ce transforms these children into social actors. Contrary to usual outcomes, com-
prehending children’s everyday practices as act of resistance, we can acknowledge
their potential in advancing children’s rights and needs in Palestine.
Ladan Rahbari
Amélia Bastos
Child Poverty in Portugal: The Effects of the Crisis and the Structural
Factors of the Problem
Child poverty is a major issue in the EU. However in Portugal this problem is more
accentuated than the EU average. In our country around one in every four child is
poor which means living with income below the poverty line and with living stan-
dards under the minimum acceptable. Moreover, children has been the age group
more vulnerable to poverty and social exclusion during the crisis. This scenario
points out for the scale of child poverty and suggests an obvious reason for social
concern about the future of these children.
The design of effective social policies to alleviate this problem is needed. Ho-
wever, to assure the efficiency of such policies the knowledge of child poverty fea-
tures is required. Our aim is to analyze recent trends of child poverty in Portugal,
in order to disentangle the effects of the crisis that has been affecting our country
since 2009. Besides this investigation we also want to seek for the structural con-
ditions in terms of sociodemographic and economic factors that have been preven-
ting to tackle the problem of child poverty in our country and / or have been contri-
buting to accent the effects of the crisis. Our approach to the analysis of poverty lies
on the concept of poverty or social exclusion in order to apply a multidimensional
approach to the problem. Our empirical analysis uses EU-SILC dataset from 2009
to 2014, covering the financial bailout and the structural reforms unleashed.
22 Salzburg, August 25 & 26, 2016
Badrinath Rao
The Indian state has enacted several laws to improve the conditions of its children.
Prominent among them are the Commission for the Protection of Child Rights Act
(2005), Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act (2009), the Pro-
tection of Children against Sexual Offenses Act (2012), and the revised National
Policy for Children (2013). India is also a signatory to the UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child (1989). In addition to these statutory measures, governments
at all levels have, from time to time, framed policies aimed at ameliorating the so-
cio-economic circumstances of children. Impressive as they might seem, these ef-
forts are largely symbolic; they have made little difference in the lives of children.
The government’s efforts are hamstrung by poorly drafted laws, lax enforcement,
and bureaucratic apathy. In sum, children are not a priority in India. What exacer-
bates this situation is that children cannot vote, articulate their concerns, or mount
a challenge to the ruling class.
Going beyond perfunctory policies and indifferent implementation, I wish to
argue that child poverty and the consequent loss of human potential are primarily
due to the reluctance of the elites to recognize the personhood and humanity of
children. Deeply entrenched feudal attitudes with their premium on status, pow-
er, and wealth preclude the Establishment from acknowledging children as per-
sons with human capabilities. An instrumental approach to people eclipses their
intrinsic worth. India will squander its demographic dividend if it does not change
its medieval, moth-eaten mindset regarding children. Well-conceived measures ai-
med at the efflorescence of human capabilities hold the key to the elimination of
child poverty in India. The first step in this process requires a radical transformati-
on in one’s outlook, one that sees children as purposeful, empowered social actors
and citizens, not just as flotsam fit for being tossed around.
ce of decent livelihoods at virtually every level has become greatly affected. Asi-
de from the economic situation, the vulnerability of children has generated much
concern worldwide necessitating a declaration (The UN Convention on the Rights
of the Child, World Declaration and Plan of Action 1989). The summary report to
the UNICEF’s conference on Children Rights and Poverty in Developing Countries
(Gordon, Pantaziz and Townsend has additionally brought attention to their plight
of poverty that has increasingly become widespread. The areas to be deliberated
at the upcoming conference, i.e. severity of the economic crisis as it impacts upon
households, families and especially children and the necessity for policy interven-
tions, present an opportunity to benefit from the deliberations and recommenda-
tions to be derived. Several household survey data (Survey of Living Conditions,
Household Budgetary, Multiple Cluster Indicator Survey together with that from
the Population and Housing Census and National Accounts collected on a fairly
regular basis will constitute the sources to be used for data analysis and measure-
ments for the paper.
Ides Nicaise
the results of this study to help policy-makers in making better choices to improve
access to ECEC, especially by disadvantaged families.
Lieselot De Keyser
One of the Welfare State’s core tasks is to prevent and fight poverty and thus to gu-
arantee participation as a fundamental civil right. As a reaction to economic crisis
Germany, as much as other EU-countries, shifted welfare policies from provisional
to activating policies stressing ‘self-responsibility’ and thus exerting more pressure
on welfare recipients – widely known as “Hartz IV”. At the same time an increasing
part of the population, among them many children, live at the poverty-line.
Referring to data from a qualitative study of families (N=35) living on wel-
fare benefits the presentation will discuss everyday-life perspectives and practices
of these families dealing with their marginal position as welfare recipients. This
will be done against the background that children’s perspectives on and experi-
ences with poverty are mediated through various welfare-state institutions, local
circumstances, cultural and family backgrounds. Methodically our research covers
interviews with parents as well as with their children, appropriate to data trian-
gulation. As a result of our research, child poverty in contemporary Germany ap-
pears in many different shapes, each of them having an impact on poor childrens’
wellbeing, their chances to participate and their future perspectives. This leads to
conclusions about the specific situation of poor children and the phenomenon of
child poverty within an affluent society.
The research project is carried out by the Institute for Employment Rese-
arch (Nuremberg) in cooperation with the University of Applied Sciences Fulda
and the University Augsburg as part of the Evaluation of the Hartz-IV-reform by
order of the German Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs.
child and as a guide concept to avoid re-victimizations both in future life and in the
therapy process itself.
Virginia Morrow
50 children collected from 2007 to 2014 as part of Young Lives . The paper will
explore the following:
• how food and hunger affects children over time, influencing decision-ma-
king about time-use and work, and movement of children between house-
holds, including early marriage;
• children’s descriptions of the quantity and quality of meals and the lin-
kages to economic ‘shocks’ such as illness, death, loss of employment,
drought and inflation;
• implications for children’s diets of social protection schemes aimed at al-
leviating poverty, such as the Productive Safety Net Programme (which
provides cash or food grain for work).
Elena Pribytkova