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2015 | 6 | 2 | 85-112

Article title

Mapping Deprivation in Rural Areas from Transylvania: Reflections on a Methodological Exercise

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The aim of the present paper is to present and critically discuss the potentialities and limits of using official data (collected and reported by state-institutions) in order to shed light on consequences of uneven development and measure area deprivation in present-day Romania. Our argumentation is based on a quantitative inquiry at the level of rural communes and small-towns from three counties located in the historical region of Transylvania. It presents the reasons for choosing certain statistical indicators, the construction of composite indexes and the profiles of localities according to their values. We explore the statistical correlations between our indexes and the poverty rates measured for 2002 (CASPIS, 2004), as well as the Local Human Development Index proposed by Sandu (2011) and revised by the World Bank (2014). Unlike other poverty-mapping inquiries, our goal was not to identify compact, segregated and severely impoverished settlements, but to measure the extent of material deprivation at the level of the entire administrative unit. In this way, we refrained from seeing poverty as the problem of a socially (and sometimes spatially) marginalized settlement, and instead defined poverty as a problem of the entire local community, that should be addressed by the local community as a whole. Our data reveals that, after controlling for poverty and local resources, the share of the Roma ethnic minority is a strong statistical predictor of registered unemployment, however, it does not correlate with the frequency of granting social assistance benefits.

Publisher

Year

Volume

6

Issue

2

Pages

85-112

Physical description

Dates

published
2015-12-01
online
2016-01-29

Contributors

author
  • Sociology Department, Babeș-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca
  • PhD candidate in Sociology, Babeș-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca
author
  • Department of Sociology and Social Work in Hungarian Language, Babeș-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca

References

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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_subbs-2015-0011
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