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Integrated human rights and poverty eradication strategy: the case of civil registration rights in Zimbabwe.
- Source :
-
International social science journal [Int Soc Sci J] 2009; Vol. 60 (197-198), pp. 389-402. - Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- High poverty levels characterise sub-Saharan Africa, Zimbabwe included. Over 80 per cent of Zimbabwe's population lived below the total consumption poverty line and 70 per cent below the food poverty line in 2003. This plummeting of social indicators resulted from the freefall suffered by the country's economy from the 1990s, after unsuccessful attempts to implement structural adjustment programmes prescribed by international financial institutions. The ensuing socioeconomic decay, political crisis and international isolation of the country from the late 1990s reversed gains made in social indicators during the 1980s. Development theories attribute poverty to unchecked population growth, political, economic and environmental mismanagement, while developing countries' leaders attribute it to historical imbalances and global political and economic injustices. Despite this debate, poverty continues to evolve, expand and deepen and the need to eradicate it has become urgent. The complex question of what causes and what drives poverty is perpetually addressed and new ideas are emerging to answer the question. One recent view is that failure to centre development on people and to declare poverty a violation of human rights has allowed poverty to grow the world over. This study uses a hypothesised cause of poverty - civil registration - to exemplify the human right nature of poverty, and how a human rights' policy can be used as an instrument to eradicate poverty. The study demonstrates that civil registration is a right of instrumental relevance to poverty; and achieving civil registration grants people access to numerous other rights, some of which will lift them out of poverty, while the failure of civil registration deprives people of access to livelihoods, thereby entrenching them in poverty.
- Subjects :
- Cultural Characteristics
Food Supply economics
Food Supply history
History, 20th Century
History, 21st Century
Poverty Areas
Starvation ethnology
Starvation history
Starvation psychology
Zimbabwe ethnology
Family Characteristics ethnology
Human Rights economics
Human Rights education
Human Rights history
Human Rights legislation & jurisprudence
Human Rights psychology
Politics
Poverty economics
Poverty ethnology
Poverty history
Poverty legislation & jurisprudence
Poverty psychology
Socioeconomic Factors
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0020-8701
- Volume :
- 60
- Issue :
- 197-198
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- International social science journal
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 20726138
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2451.2010.01728.x