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Catalonia: from the fight against poverty to the fight against poor people

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Catalonia: from the fight against poverty to the fight against poor people

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dc.contributor.author Fernández González, Miquel
dc.date.accessioned 2023-10-31T12:49:20Z
dc.date.available 2023-11-01T05:45:05Z
dc.date.issued 2014 es_ES
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10550/90773
dc.description.abstract This chapter contends that there has been a significant shift in emphasis in how the problem of poverty is conceived and addressed in Catalonia. At the current time, a growing demonisation of people experiencing poverty is evident, which sits alongside a general mood in favour of nationalism. Support for both comes from neoliberal responses to financial pressures exacted on the state. Although far from intertwined or an inevitable coupling of interests, these dominant moods reflect the contemporary reality of Catalonia. It is particularly noteworthy for Scotland, where welfare debates have largely been seen as central to the independence debate, as it shows that political self-determination is not intrinsically socially progressive. After the end of the regime of dictator Francisco Franco, Catalan society pursued a progressive goal of ending poverty. Dozens of campaigns against poverty and in favour of labour, social services and affordable housing established the socio-economic framework for a Catalan welfare state. 1 However, in the decade following 1996, Catalonia took a neoliberal turn and, instead, pursued the enrichment of the few at the expense of the majority. Although GDP rose by three points during the decade, the Gini co-efficient rose in a similar proportion. 2 More recently, this situation has worsened as the pursuit of neoliberal goals that were initially merely unfavourable to people experiencing poverty has been succeeded by social policies that are explicitly hostile towards them. Fiscal pressure is used as an argument for the necessity of scaling back on social protection expenditure, although, as it will be argued here, the underlying … es_ES
dc.language.iso es es_ES
dc.publisher Glasgow Caledonian University es_ES
dc.source Fernández González, M. (2014). Catalonia: From the fight against poverty to the fight against poor people. In Poverty in Scotland 2014. The Independence Referendum and Beyond. En Gill Scott, Peter Kelly, John H McKendrick, Gerry Mooney y John Dickie, (ed.). (244–249). Child Poverty Action Group/The Open University in Scotland/Glasgow Caledonian University/the Poverty Alliance. es_ES
dc.title Catalonia: from the fight against poverty to the fight against poor people es_ES
dc.type book part es_ES
dc.subject.unesco UNESCO::SOCIOLOGÍA es_ES
dc.accrualmethod S es_ES
dc.embargo.terms 0 days es_ES
dc.type.hasVersion VoR es_ES
dc.rights.accessRights open access es_ES

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