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Social exclusion

About: Social exclusion is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 9534 publications have been published within this topic receiving 194118 citations. The topic is also known as: social marginalization & exclusion.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider how identity, a person's sense of self, affects economic outcomes and incorporate the psychology and sociology of identity into an economic model of behavior, and construct a simple game-theoretic model showing how identity can affect individual interactions.
Abstract: This paper considers how identity, a person's sense of self, affects economic outcomes. We incorporate the psychology and sociology of identity into an economic model of behavior. In the utility function we propose, identity is associated with different social categories and how people in these categories should behave. We then construct a simple game-theoretic model showing how identity can affect individual interactions. The paper adapts these models to gender discrimination in the workplace, the economics of poverty and social exclusion, and the household division of labor. In each case, the inclusion of identity substantively changes conclusions of previous economic analysis.

4,825 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a case study of parents' involvement with their third-grade children using interviews and classroom observations, and reveal how some black parents, deeply concemed about the historical legacy of discrimination against blacks in schooling, approach the school with open criticisms.
Abstract: This article presents a case study of parents' involvement with their third-grade children. Using interviews and classroom observations, the research revealed how some black parents, deeply concemed about the historical legacy of discrimination against blacks in schooling, approach the school with open criticisms. Since educators seek a positive and deferential role for parents in schooling, race appears to play an independent role in parents' ability to comply with educators' requests (although social class also mediates the ways in which black parents express their concerns). The results highlight the difference between possession and activation of capital and the value accorded displays of capital in particular settings. Taken together, the findings suggest the importance of focusing on moments of inclusion and exclusion in examining how individuals activate social and cultural capital

1,444 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is reviewed showing that humans demonstrate convergence between the 2 types of pain in thought, emotion, and behavior, and that social and physical pain share common physiological mechanisms.
Abstract: The authors forward the hypothesis that social exclusion is experienced as painful because reactions to rejection are mediated by aspects of the physical pain system. The authors begin by presenting the theory that overlap between social and physical pain was an evolutionary development to aid social animals in responding to threats to inclusion. The authors then review evidence showing that humans demonstrate convergence between the 2 types of pain in thought, emotion, and behavior, and demonstrate, primarily through nonhuman animal research, that social and physical pain share common physiological mechanisms. Finally, the authors explore the implications of social pain theory for rejection-elicited aggression and physical pain disorders.

1,368 citations

MonographDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make a scientific contribution to the development of social indicators for the purposes of European policy making and consider the principles underlying the construction of policyrelevant indicators, the definition of indicators, and the issues that arise in their implementation, including the statistical data required.
Abstract: Social indicators are an important tool for evaluating a country's level of social development and for assessing the impact of policy. Such indicators are already in use in investigating poverty and social exclusion in several European countries and have begun to play a significant role in advancing the social dimension of the EU as a whole. The purpose of this book is to make a scientific contribution to the development of social indicators for the purposes of European policy‐making. It considers the principles underlying the construction of policy‐relevant indicators, the definition of indicators, and the issues that arise in their implementation, including that of the statistical data required. It seeks to bring together theoretical and methodological methods in the measurement of poverty/social exclusion with the empirical practice of social policy. The experience of member states is reviewed, including an assessment of the National Action Plans on Social Inclusion submitted for the first time in June 2001 by the 15 EU governments. The key areas covered by the book are poverty, including its intensity and persistence, income inequality, non‐monetary deprivation, low educational attainment, unemployment, joblessness, poor health, poor housing and homelessness, functional illiteracy and innumeracy, and restricted social participation. In each case, the book assesses the strengths and weaknesses of different indicators relevant to social inclusion in the EU, and makes recommendations for the indicators to be employed. The book is based on a report prepared at the request of the Belgian government, as part of the Belgian presidency of the Council of the EU in the second half of 2001, and presented at a conference on ‘Indicators for Social Inclusion: Making Common EU Objectives Work’ held at Antwerp on 14–15 Sept 2001.

1,192 citations

Book
30 Nov 1998
TL;DR: The Discourses of Social Exclusion as mentioned in this paper, from social justice to social cohesion, The Optimism of will, Staking Claims, Community Rules, New Labour, New Discourse, From Equality to Social Inclusion, Delivering Social Inclusions, The New Durkheimian Hegemony.
Abstract: Acknowledgements - Introduction - Discourses of Social Exclusion - From Social Justice to Social Cohesion - The Optimism of Will - Staking Claims - Community Rules - New Labour, New Discourse - From Equality to Social Inclusion - Delivering Social Inclusion - The New Durkheimian Hegemony - Notes - Select Bibliography - Index

1,107 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023225
2022507
2021442
2020429
2019448
2018462