Save the Children seeks to eradicate poverty in a number of ways. We raise awareness of child poverty among political and economic decision-makers and lobby for policy changes, based on our research and experience of working with children. Our in-depth analysis was influential in changing World Bank policy – the organisation now ensures that countries’ poverty reduction strategies prioritise children.
In 2005 we helped put children at the heart of initiatives to influence world leaders to deliver trade justice, drop debt and secure more and better aid. Across the world, unprecedented numbers voiced the demand for economic justice. Save the Children took part in international policy meetings with world leaders and urged an end to harmful conditions on aid. Such widespread collaborative campaigning secured a commitment to US$20 billion more aid, and debt cancellation for 18 poor countries. Working with others, we will continue to exert pressure to ensure these commitments are met. We will strive to obtain debt relief for other poor countries.
Friday, December 24, 2010
Thursday, October 8, 2009
SAVE CHILDREANS FROM POVERTY!!!

The poorest of the poor, around the world, have the worst health. Those at the bottom of the distribution of global and national wealth, those marginalized and excluded within countries, and countries themselves disadvantaged by historical exploitation and persistent inequity in global institutions of power and policy-making present an urgent moral and practical focus for action. But focusing on those with the least, on the ‘gap’ between the poorest and the rest, is only a partial response.
… In rich countries, low socioeconomic position means poor education, lack of amenities, unemployment and job insecurity, poor working conditions, and unsafe neighbourhoods, with their consequent impact on family life. These all apply to the socially disadvantaged in low-income countries in addition to the considerable burden of material deprivation and vulnerability to natural disasters. So these dimensions of social disadvantage – that the health of the worst off in high-income countries is, in a few dramatic cases, worse than average health in some lower-income countries … – are important for health.
Poverty is hunger. Poverty is lack of shelter. Poverty is being sick and not being able to see a doctor. Poverty is not having access to school and not knowing how to read. Poverty is not having a job, is fear for the future, living one day at a time. Poverty is losing a child to illness brought about by unclean water. Poverty is powerlessness, lack of representation and freedom.
Poverty has many faces, changing from place to place and across time, and has been described in many ways (for a collection of readings, see Poems and Personal Accounts of Poverty). Most often, poverty is a situation people want to escape. So poverty is a call to action -- for the poor and the wealthy alike -- a call to change the world so that many more may have enough to eat, adequate shelter, access to education and health, protection from violence, and a voice in what happens in their communities.
To know what helps to reduce poverty, what works and what does not, what changes over time, poverty has to be defined, measured, and studied -- and even experienced. As poverty has many dimensions, it has to be looked at through a variety of indicators -- levels of income and consumption, social indicators, and indicators of vulnerability to risks and of socio/political access.
Much work has been done using consumption or income-based measures of poverty, but also on non-income dimensions of poverty, most notably in the Human Development Report prepared annually by the United Nations Development Programme. See New Directions in Poverty Measurement below.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
