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Social Exclusion in a Comparative Context
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Reimer, Bill (Author)
 
Title
            Social Exclusion in a Comparative Context
        Abstract
            This paper outlines a framework for understanding social exclusion that is multidimensional, dynamic, multi-leveled, and relational. Inspired by Polanyi's classification of the modes of economic inclusion, we propose that social inclusion and exclusion processes are rooted in four types of social relations: market (exchange and barter), bureaucratic (rational-legal), associative (common interest), and communal (complex reciprocity and shared identity). Each type reflects different, but integrated processes of social exclusion and inclusion. These four types are outlined conceptually, then operationalized using data from a Canadian survey conducted in 1995 rural households. The results show the extent to which the four types of relations are used for social support, their interdependence, and their relationship to selected household characteristics and outcomes. The policy implications discussed emphasize the ways in which building capacity in all four types of relations can increase the level of social inclusion.
        Publication
            Sociologia Ruralis
        Volume
            44
        Issue
            1
        Pages
            76-94
        Date
            January 1, 2004
        Language
            English
        ISSN
            1467-9523
        URL
            
        Accessed
            2017-05-10, 6:53 p.m.
        Library Catalog
            Wiley Online Library
        Citation
            Reimer, Bill. 2004. “Social Exclusion in a Comparative Context.” Sociologia Ruralis 44 (1): 76–94. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9523.2004.00263.x.
                Discipline
            
            
        
                Publication year
            
            
        Keywords
            - Canada
 - economic inclusion
 - rural sociology
 - social exclusion
 
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