Youth at Risk, Social Exclusion, and Intergenerational Poverty Dynamics: A New Survey Instrument with Application to Brazil
Keywords
RURAL AREASPUBLIC SERVICES
PARENTS
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
HEALTH SERVICES
FATHERHOOD
PRIVATE SECTOR
FATHERS
INTERGENERATIONAL POVERTY
DRUGS
PSYCHOLOGISTS
YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT
ADOLESCENTS
ADULTS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
TEENAGE YEARS
URBAN AREAS
SEXUAL ACTIVITIES
FIRST SEXUAL EXPERIENCE
EDUCATION & THE POOR
CLIMATE
YOUTH DEVELOPMENT
INHABITANTS
BIOLOGICAL FATHER
RESIDENCES
NORMS
GENERATIONS
SOCIAL EXCLUSION
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES
SOCIAL NETWORKS
JUVENILE DELINQUENCY
OCCUPANCY
INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
WORKERS
SEXUAL ABUSE OF CHILDREN
SAFETY
EARLY PREGNANCY
HOUSEHOLDS
PARTNERSHIP
SOCIAL SERVICES
MOTHERS
FEMALES
SEXUAL ABUSE
MARITAL STATUS
HOUSES
SEXUAL RELATIONSHIP
SEXUALITY
BROTHERS
HEALTH CARE
SCHOOLS
POOR NEIGHBORHOODS
DRUG USE
LIVING CONDITIONS
SHELTER
NUTRITION
VIOLENCE
YOUTH GROUP
MOTIVATION
AT RISK CHILDREN
CRIME
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
GENDER
NEIGHBORHOODS
RISK FACTORS
DROPOUTS
SEX
YOUNG PEOPLE
SEXUAL ACTIVITY
ABUSED CHILDREN
YOUTH
MIDDLE CLASS
CONTRACEPTIVES
HUMAN RIGHTS
PARENTHOOD
YOUTH VIOLENCE YOUTH
POPULATION GROUPS
GANGS
UNEMPLOYMENT
HOUSING
SOCIAL EXCLUSION
CHILD CARE
POOR CHILDREN
SOCIAL CAPITAL
ANXIETY
YOUTH POPULATION
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14103Abstract
This paper addresses the underlying causes of problems and risks faced by poor and excluded youth of 10-24 years of age. The authors develop a survey instrument that addresses poverty in a broad sense, including hunger, early pregnancy and fatherhood, violence, crime, drug use, low levels of social capital, and low educational attainment. The authors also shed light on intergenerational transfer of risks that are considered to induce poverty. They document findings based on the survey data gathered in three poor urban neighborhoods in Fortaleza in Northeast Brazil. Their main findings show that: (i) Poor youth are at considerable risk of growing up without their father. Only 7 percent grow up with their father present in the household. (ii) The intergenerational transmission of low education attainment is at play, but it is diminishing. (iii) The risk of early pregnancy and fatherhood is large among poor and excluded youth-31 percent of the youth had their first child before age 16, triple that of the adult population. (iv) The risk of sexual abuse and violence within the household exists-6 percent of the youth answered that they had their first sexual relationship with a family member, and 13 percent grow up in households with violence. (v) The social capital levels are low-only 5 percent of the youth and 9 percent of the adults have measurable social capital. (vi) The risk of growing up in a violent neighborhood is large-59 percent of the youth claim that they live in a violent neighborhood, 80 percent feel unsafe in their neighborhood, and 50 percent feel unsafe at home.Date
2004-05Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/14103http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14103
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 UnportedCollections
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