1. Multidimensional Poverty and Deprivation: An Introduction; Roger White
2. The Politics of Poverty Measurement and Social Policies: Global Observations; Udaya R. Wagle
3. Efficiency and Distributive Justice in Multidimensional Poverty Issues; Nicole Rippin
4. An Analysis of Multidimensional Poverty: Evidence from Italy; Manuela Coromaldi and Carlo Drago
5. Economic Vulnerability in Spain: Before, During, and “After” Crisis; Jesus Pérez-Mayo
6. Material Deprivation, Health and Well-being in Older Age: A Comparative Analysis of 14 European Countries; Marco Terraneo
7. Immigrant-Native Differences in Multidimensional Poverty After the Great Recession: A Comparison of Five European Countries; Rosa Martínez and Jesús Ruiz-Huerta
8. Multidimensional Poverty Among the Native- and Foreign-born in the United States: Evidence from the 2010-2014 American Community Surveys; Roger White and Stacy Yamasaki
9. U.S. Multidimensional Poverty by Race, Ethnicity and Motherhood: Evidence from Pennsylvania Census Data; Feridoon Koohi-Kamali and Ran Liu
10. Assessing Multidimensional Deprivation Among the Elderly in the United States; Shatakshee Dhongde
Roger White is Professor of Economics at Whittier College, USA, where he holds the Douglas W. Ferguson Chair in International Economics. His research largely focuses on international trade, migration, cultural economics, and economic globalization. White is the author of four books, and he has published more than three dozen peer-reviewed articles and book chapters.
This edited collection provides a comprehensive examination of multidimensional poverty for a wide variety of economies and societies, with a general focus on multidimensional poverty in developed countries, where poverty is often overlooked. Arguing that income- and consumption-based poverty measures cannot provide a full picture of the presence and extent of poverty, the contributors suggest new ways to structure assessment indexes. Complementing the discussion of new rubrics, a series of single-country and comparative examples from Europe and the United States examine variation in multidimensional poverty incidence and the extent of deprivation. This combination of methodology and application will appeal to academics, researchers, and policymakers alike.