Keywords
INEQUALITYHUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS
NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
POLITICAL OPPOSITION
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
OWNERSHIP OF LAND
MIGRATION POLICY
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
EXCLUSION
LOCAL COMMUNITY
SOCIAL JUSTICE
IMMIGRANT
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
POOR WOMEN
MEDICAL CARE
CORRUPTION
POLITICAL RIGHTS
SOVEREIGNTY
BIODIVERSITY
NATIONAL LEVEL
QUALITY ASSURANCE
ECONOMIC POLICIES
PUBLIC SERVICE
HOST COUNTRY
UNEQUAL POWER RELATIONS
MIGRANT WORKERS
HEALTH WORKERS
GLOBAL COMMISSION ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
LABOR MARKET
BASIC HEALTH CARE
LAND TENURE
MARKET ECONOMY
EQUITABLE ACCESS
SOCIAL POLICIES
BRAIN DRAIN
COMMUNITIES OF ORIGIN
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
GLOBAL COMMISSION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INFORMAL ECONOMY
RESEARCH COMMUNITY
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SOCIAL RESEARCH
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
STRUCTURAL INEQUALITIES
DISADVANTAGED GROUPS
MIGRATION POLICIES
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
UNEQUAL POWER
SOCIAL SECTOR
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
PRIMARY EDUCATION
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
DRUG TRAFFICKING
CITIZEN
IDS
PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY
SOCIAL DIMENSIONS
RETURNEE
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
GENDER
INEQUITIES
FINANCIAL CAPITAL
INDIVIDUAL HOUSEHOLDS
SOCIAL SERVICES
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
POVERTY REDUCTION
RURAL POVERTY
RETURNEES
NURSES
EXPATRIATE NATIONALS
SLUM-DWELLERS
JOB CREATION
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
POLICY FRAMEWORK
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
TRANSFER OF KNOWLEDGE
HUMAN SETTLEMENT
SOCIAL COUNCIL
SKILLED WORKERS
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR MIGRATION
CLIMATE CHANGE
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
CAPITAL ASSETS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
GOOD GOVERNANCE
POOR PEOPLE
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
LARGE NUMBER OF WOMEN
GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
MIGRANTS
BASIC NEEDS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
WORKING CONDITIONS
SOCIAL INEQUITIES
SERVICE PROVIDERS
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
PURCHASING POWER
PUBLIC SERVICES
NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
POLICY DECISIONS
SAFETY NET
DISSEMINATION
RULE OF LAW
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
URBAN AREAS
ACCESS TO SERVICES
SOCIAL SERVICE
ENDOWMENTS
PEOPLES
ERADICATION OF POVERTY
CHILD CARE
NATURAL RESOURCES
HIV
TECHNICAL SKILLS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
LEGAL STATUS
POLICY RESEARCH
POTENTIAL MIGRANTS
SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS
BENEFITS OF MIGRATION
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
DEVELOPMENT BANK
EMPOWERMENT OF THE POOR
MIGRANT
HOMELESS PEOPLE
EXPATRIATE
SOCIAL COHESION
GLOBAL CONSENSUS
VULNERABILITY
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
SOCIAL IMPACT
SOCIAL TENSIONS
HOST COUNTRIES
STATE POLICIES
AUTONOMY OF WOMEN
TRADE UNION
URBAN POVERTY
DEVELOPMENT INTERVENTIONS
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY
SEXUAL EXPLOITATION
SOCIAL NORMS
CITIZENS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES
GLOBAL POVERTY
HUMAN SECURITY
INTERNATIONALIZATION
ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT
COUNTRIES OF ORIGIN
HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION
NATIONAL LEVELS
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
SOCIAL WELFARE
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
HEALTH SECTOR
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
MIGRATION
URBAN CENTERS
PUBLIC INVESTMENTS
HUMAN RIGHTS
HUMAN CAPITAL
SLUM DWELLERS
RETURN MIGRATION
PUBLIC POLICY
RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION
NATURAL DISASTERS
MARKET INFORMATION
SOCIAL AFFAIRS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
TERTIARY EDUCATION
GENDER ROLES
PERSONAL SAFETY
URBANIZATION
SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION
ECONOMIC POLICY
URBAN SETTLEMENTS
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
REMITTANCES
POLICY MAKERS
FINANCIAL MARKET
FAMILY MEMBERS
UNION
FAMILIES
LIVELIHOOD OPPORTUNITIES
POTENTIAL CONTRIBUTION
NATURAL RESOURCE
INTERNATIONAL BANK
NATIONAL BOUNDARIES
SOCIAL POLICY
LITERATE SOCIETY
POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT
PROGRESS
HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
CITIZENSHIP
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
DEVELOPMENT POLICIES
REMITTANCE
TRADE UNIONS
URBAN SLUMS
LABOR MARKETS
URBAN COMMUNITY
ASSET ACCUMULATION
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6542Abstract
This series "New Frontiers of Social Policy" aims to promote social development through systematic attention to the underlying social context and the social outcomes of development interventions and public policy. This book series has been conceived and produced for the broader development community, rather than for social policy specialists alone. This book is particularly, although not exclusively, relevant to those concerned with the one-third of the world's population that still depends on the informal economy for its livelihood. By making the case for an asset-based social policy, it moves well beyond social welfare palliatives for needy households toward public actions that give people the means and opportunities to accumulate assets and have greater control over their livelihoods. To be successful, an asset-based social policy needs to address several challenges, initial inequality, informality, imbalance in asset building opportunity, and inadequate state effectiveness, endemic in many developing countries.Date
2008Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/6542http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6542
978-0-8213-6995-1
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/Related items
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