100 Questions: Identifying Research Priorities For Poverty Prevention and Reduction
100 Questions: Identifying Research Priorities For Poverty Prevention and Reduction
100 Questions: Identifying Research Priorities For Poverty Prevention and Reduction
The questions were identified in an exercise run by JRF and the Centre
for Science and Policy at the University of Cambridge, involving 45
participants from government, non-governmental organisations,
academia and research.
5. To what extent do public and political discourses (in the media, for
example) shape public attitudes to people living in poverty, and to what
extent is it the other way round?
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7. What values, frames and narratives are associated with greater
support for tackling poverty, and why?
11. Do more affluent groups in society feel that they are entitled to the
share of income and wealth they currently have, and if so, why?
3. What evidence is there that youth work can have a positive impact on
outcomes for young people in poverty?
5. How, why and where have poverty rates among minority ethnic
groups changed?
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6. What are the most effective interventions for reducing the social gap
in educational outcomes?
10. Why is there a weaker link between family disadvantage and child
outcomes for some children, families and communities (for example,
among some minority ethnic groups)?
11. What are the key mechanisms through which poverty is translated
into poorer life chances for children?
Employment
4. What are the most effective and viable mechanisms for shifting
responsibility from state to employer for reducing poverty?
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8. How can people be helped to progress out of low-paid employment
into better-paid jobs (considering the roles of governments, employers
and employees)?
9. How can policy incentivise the creation of high-quality jobs for people
at risk of poverty?
13. What does effective worker representation look like for reducing
poverty?
1. What is the nature and extent of poverty among those who do not or
cannot access the safety net when they need it?
2. What are the health risks associated with poor-quality work (low paid,
insecure, poorly regulated etc) for individuals or households in poverty?
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3. What are the causal connections and intersections between poverty
and wider social problems (such as homelessness, substance misuse,
mental and physical ill health)?
6. What are the factors (local, global and other) that affect the ability of
people in poverty to have a healthy diet?
8. What are the causal links between poverty and low subjective
wellbeing (including isolation and loneliness)?
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5. Does universalism build solidarity and make it easier to justify public
expenditure on anti-poverty measures?
6. How can essential goods and services provided by the private and
regulated sectors become affordable, accessible and inclusive to people
in poverty?
10. What are the most effective ways to improve the quality, affordability
and choice of food on sale in disadvantaged areas?
2. What can be done to ensure that enough homes are provided with
sufficient security of tenure and at rent levels that will address the needs
of those in poverty?
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6. What are the possible solutions to poverty in parts of the country that
have been in decline for a long time (often places that were formerly
industrialised that have not recovered)?
4. The claim is often made that high personal and business taxation
leads to disinvestment – for example, people and businesses leaving the
UK for lower tax regimes. Taking into account international experience
and evidence, how robust is this claim?
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8. What is the most effective balance between supply-side and demand-
side interventions in meeting additional needs and costs (for example, in
the provision of childcare)?
10. How can the social security system become more focused on
achieving beneficial long-term outcomes for individuals?
12. What might social mobility look like if relative poverty were
eradicated without addressing inequality in the top half of the
redistribution?
4. What are the costs of poverty to the individual, society and the
economy, and who benefits most from reducing those costs?
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9. What are the dynamics of how people experience poverty through
their life-course – for example, moving in and out of poverty, versus brief
spells, versus living in poverty for a long time – and why?
11. What are the implications of deep and/or widespread poverty for
democracy?
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