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The case for cross-disciplinary social science research on poverty, inequality and well-being

John Toye, David Hulme and University of Manchester

No GPRG-WPS-001, Economics Series Working Papers from University of Oxford, Department of Economics

Abstract: Arguments for cross-disciplinary research in development studies have been applied recently to work on poverty, inequality and well-being. However, much research on these issues remains fragmented and, in particular, the intellectual barrier between economics and the other social science subjects continues to be powerful. In this paper, we review the prospects for cross-disciplinary research (both multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary); and, examine the ways in which forms of being ‘disciplined’, and the linkages between disciplines and professions, constrains such research. We also introduce the papers in this collection and explain their relationship to the quest for crossdisciplinary research on poverty issues. Our conclusion is that cross-discipline working should be promoted and that both interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approaches can benefit research on poverty and well-being, provided that their specific merits and demerits are evaluated in relation to the research task in hand.

Keywords: Poverty; Well-being; Inequality; Methods; Theory; Multidisciplinarity; Interdisciplinarity (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005-01-01
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