Monday, October 7, 2013

With my two emphases being psychology and business I am interested in how poverty effects psychological development and what role private sector business can contribute to elevating people out of poverty. While these two ideas are on the surface miles apart I think I can find a way to draw them together. I believe that poverty is every American's problem and one that will take the collective effort to solve. I also believe that our civic choices, particularly political choices, play a major role and bear much of the responsibility for poverty. 

The effects of poverty on the mental, emotional, and behavioral health of children and youth: implications for prevention.
Abstract:
"This article considers the implications for prevention science of recent advances in research on family poverty and children's mental, emotional, and behavioral health. First, we describe definitions of poverty and the conceptual and empirical challenges to estimating the causal effects of poverty on children's mental, emotional, and behavioral health. Second, we offer a conceptual framework that incorporates selection processes that affect who becomes poor as well as mechanisms through which poverty appears to influence child and youth mental health. Third, we use this conceptual framework to selectively review the growing literatures on the mechanisms through which family poverty influences the mental, emotional, and behavioral health of children. We illustrate how a better understanding of the mechanisms of effect by which poverty impacts children's mental, emotional, and behavioral health is valuable in designing effective preventive interventions for those in poverty. Fourth, we describe strategies to directly reduce poverty and the implications of these strategies for prevention. This article is one of three in a special section (see also Biglan, Flay, Embry, & Sandler, 2012; Muñoz, Beardslee, & Leykin, 2012) representing an elaboration on a theme for prevention science developed by the 2009 report of the National Research Council and Institute of Medicine."

Theories of Poverty and Anti-Poverty Programs in Community Development
Abstract:
"In this paper I explore how five competing theories of poverty shape anti-poverty strategies. Since most rural community development efforts aim to relieve causes or symptoms of poverty, it makes a difference which theory of poverty is believed to be responsible for the problem being addressed. In this paper five theories of poverty are distilled from the literature. It will be shown that these theories of poverty place its origin from 1) individual deficiencies, 2) cultural belief systems that support subcultures in poverty, 3) political-economic distortions, 4) geographical disparities, or 5) cumulative and circumstantial origins. Then, I show how each theory of poverty finds expression in common policy discussion and community development programs aimed to address the causes of poverty. Building a full understanding of each of these competing theories of poverty shows how they shape different community development approaches. While no one theory explains all instances of poverty, this paper aims to show how community development practices that address the complex and overlapping sources of poverty more effectively reduce poverty compared to programs that address a single theory."

Generating Skilled Self-Employment in Developing Countries: Experimental Evidence from Uganda
Abstract:
"We study a government program in Uganda designed to help the poor and unemployed become self-employed artisans. The program targeted people ages 16 to 35 in Uganda’s conflict-affected north, inviting them to form groups and submit grant proposals to pay for vocational training and business start-up. Funding was randomly assigned, and treatment groups received unsupervised cash grants of $382 per member on average. The government’s main aims were to increase in-comes and thus also promote social stability. The treatment group invests some of the grant in skills training but most in tools and materials. After four years half practice a skilled trade. Relative to the control group, the program increases business assets by 57%, hours of work by 17%, and earnings by 38%. We see no corresponding impact, however, on individual social cohesion, participation, anti-social behavior, or protest attitudes and participation. Based on individual earnings alone we estimate 30 to 50% annual returns to investment from the program. We also see evidence that the treatment group grow their enterprises and hire labor, extending the employment impacts of the program. Impact levels are similar for treatment men and women, but are qualitatively different for women — both because women begin poorer (meaning the impact is larger relative to their starting point), and because women’s enterprises and earnings stagnate without the program but take off after a grant. The patterns we observe — high rates of investment, new business start-up, and returns on investment — are consistent with able but credit-constrained young people."

Many Americans blame ‘government welfare’ for persistent poverty
Abstract:
"Two decades after President Bill Clinton promised to “end welfare as we know it,” Americans blame government handouts for persistent poverty in the United States more than any other single factor, according to an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. Lack of job opportunities” was the second most popular answer, at 18 percent, followed by “lack of good educational opportunities” and “breakdown of families,” with 13 percent apiece."
http://www.marfdrat.net/2013/06/12/poll-many-americans-blame-government-welfare-for-persistent-poverty/#.UlNugdLkuLI

References:
Bradshaw, T. (2006, February). Rural Poverty Research Center. Retrieved from Theories of Poverty and Anti-Poverty Programs in Community : http://www.rupri.org/Forms/WP06-05.pdf
Christopher Blattman, N. F. (2013, September 27). Generating Skilled Self-Employment in Developing Countries: Experimental Evidence from Uganda. Retrieved from Social Science Research Network: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2268552
Marfdrat. (2013, June 12). Poll: Many Americans blame ‘government welfare’ for persistent poverty. Retrieved from Marfdrat.com: http://www.marfdrat.net/2013/06/12/poll-many-americans-blame-government-welfare-for-persistent-poverty/#.UlS-gtLkuLJ
Yoshikawa H, A. J. (2012, May-June). The effects of poverty on the mental, emotional, and behavioral health of children and youth: implications for prevention. Retrieved from NCBI Pubmed.gov: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22583341







5 comments:

  1. Scott,
    I think you have potential to create a very interesting article on how to elevate people out of poverty through small businesses. I also think it is intriguing and would be an informative read to understand more about the links of poverty and the affects of psychological development. The parallels you could draw there could be groundbreaking as it would provide a source in which to alleviate poverty through business! What a way to reduce poverty!

    One connection I wasn't able to make was that of American's political choices and how that will relate to both psychology and business. How do you intend to draw those relations?

    (Also, just as a rule of thumb for the future to help avoid any type of plagiarizing issues, if you use someone else's words you've got to quote them. It is possible you wrote up the sources and the abstracts, if not though, I'd put some quotations around them real quick.)

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    1. Thanks for the comments and the heads up... Added the quotations and the references, good call... I am still working out how to tie the political choices portion to the ideas.

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  2. I like how you look at the fact that many americans blame the government for the poverty, but you state that you believe that it is our responsibility to solve. I also feel the same way. I think that americans have the intelligence to come together and solve may problems. However, I feel that looking at Uganda would not be the right place to look to solve our problems. Because Uganda is still a developing country that lacks many essential needs, the patterns of development will be different. The people may share the common goal as us, to thrive and prosper, but we have advanced significantly in all technology giving us many more insights to different phenomena to solve problems. I think your are on the right tract, but you need to look for more articles like the Anti-Poverty Programs in America. Also Search for the underlying factors that lead to poverty and identify how to fix them through small businesses.

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  3. Scott, I'm interested to see you develop a presentation about how the private sector businesses could evaluate people out of poverty. It seems that a lot of pressure is placed on the public sector to take on poverty. However, I think it is the private sector that really dictate if an individual can come out of poverty.

    The private sector generates countless job opportunities which help people in poverty. I would question if a business realizes the role it plays in the overall community well-being that it operates in? Can the business' awareness of this fact impact its contributions to better social control within a community?

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  4. I really like how you are taking your two separate interests and trying to combine them for your research topic. I think that it will give you a good edge on having a passion for the topic and if my opinion that is always the most important thing to do something well. I will look forward to seeing how you research comes along.

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