Home
Scholarly Works
Responding to poverty: centering the poor and...
Journal article

Responding to poverty: centering the poor and reimagining the duties of the affluent

Abstract

In Poverty, Solidarity, and Poor-Led Social Movements, Monique Deveaux criticizes and reframes the traditional, moral (and often individualistic) response to poverty in favor of a political and collective one that centers the role of the poor and poor-led groups in the anti-poverty agenda. I have two aims in this review, a supportive one and a more critical one. On the supportive side, I examine the advances Deveaux makes by 1) expanding the category of agents of justice; 2) putting the poor at the center of an effective response to poverty; and 3) changing the emphasis from individual duties to a collective response. On the critical side, I revisit Deveaux’s critique of the traditional approach and argue that she unnecessarily shifts the moral burden away from the affluent whose complicity and capacity remain important grounds of obligation. In conclusion, I consider some remaining challenges that are (helpfully) exposed by Deveaux’s account.

Authors

Igneski V

Journal

Journal of Global Ethics, Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 244–252

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

September 2, 2023

DOI

10.1080/17449626.2023.2272774

ISSN

1744-9626

Contact the Experts team