INVESTIGADORES
CIMADAMORE alberto Daniel
capítulos de libros
Título:
Chapter I: The politics of social Inclusion
Autor/es:
GABRIELE KOEHLER; ALBERTO D. CIMADAMORE; FADIA KIWAN; PEDRO MONREAL GONZALEZ
Libro:
The politics of social inclusion. Bridging knowledge and policies towards social change
Editorial:
Ibidem Verlag - UNESCO - CROP
Referencias:
Lugar: Stuttgart; Año: 2020; p. 13 - 40
Resumen:
Academics, policy-makers, civil society and concerned citizens across the planet are alarmed by the persistence of global poverty, the intensity of social exclusion and increasing inequalities. Multidimensional poverty continues to affect half of humanity. Inequality has reached unprecedented levels: according to Oxfam?s analysis, for example, in 2018, 26 people owned the same wealth as the 3.8 billion people who make up the poorest half of humanity (Oxfam, 2019; also see Piketty, 2014; UNRISD, 2018). Climate change impact and armed conflicts are wiping out many human development achievements of the past decades, frequently exacerbating existing patterns of social exclusion.To redress the dystopian situation, the international community adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development ? Transforming our World (United Nations, 2015), the Paris Agreement on Climate Change (UNFCCC, 2015), and designed a new urban agenda (UN Habitat, 2016). All of these have in common a commitment to norms and principles of social inclusion ? promising to ?end poverty and hunger in all their forms and dimensions? and to ?leave no one behind?. Leaving no one behind has been understood in a universalist and rights-based interpretation as including all people on the planet in sustainable and just societies. That would indeed be transformative of the dominant socio-economic orders, which have been reproducing and cementing poverty, inequality and social exclusion throughout history.The status quo to be transformed is maintained by power relations which need to be addressed in order to produce sustainable economic, social, ecological and political inclusion for all. However, the structural transformations that would be required to unseat the dynamics of poverty, inequalities and exclusion are far less addressed, and do not feature expressly in the normative texts. Besides, the concept of inclusion is not defined, and therefore it is not possible tond multilateral policy debates (UNRISD, 2016), and the absence of a clear understanding of what social inclusion means articulates the problematic on which this book intends to focus.This volume was therefore conceived to address the power relations that both sustain and transform social orders marked by social exclusion, and to advance the understanding of the politics of social inclusion.