Overcoming Poverty in Multidimensional Poverty Interventions through Self-assessment and Mentoring

Keywords: empowerment, multidimensional poverty, self-assessment, mentoring.

Abstract

A microfinance organization in Paraguay has developed the “Poverty Stoplight” (PS), an innovative technological tool that allows families to self-assess their level of multidimensional poverty and start an integrated mentoring process whose goal is to empower families to eliminate multidimensional poverty based on what the participants value the most. During the program, a mentor works with participants to design a customized family plan to identify their most significant challenges in order to overcome their deprivations. The PS places human development and poverty elimination as the main objectives for the intervention. This paper has three elements. First, it presents the methodology for poverty intervention and the detailed tool (i.e. a multidimensional metric) used to encourage reflecting and promoting agency. Second, it uses the Capability Approach to explore the potential of the PS intervention to increase agency and decrease multidimensional deprivations. Third, it presents results from an ongoing research project that evaluates the program’s effectiveness in helping participants overcome poverty. This empirical part is based on data collected between August 2015 and June 2017 from over 9,000 microfinance clients and analyzed using the technique of OLS regressions. The results indicate that participation in the program is indeed associated with a higher probability of overcoming multidimensional poverty.

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Author Biographies

Juan Carlos Pane, University of Sussex

He is a doctoral researcher at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) at the University of Sussex. His research interests include power and empowerment, poverty, and international development. He has a Master’s degree in Political Science from the University of Missouri (USA) and a Master’s degree in Social Research from the University of Edinburgh (UK). He has extensive working experience as a development practitioner.

Katharina Hammler, University of Sussex

She is the Director of Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) of Fundación Paraguaya. She was born in Austria where she studied Economics, Socioeconomics, and Political Sciences before earning a Ph.D. in Global Development from Tulane University in New Orleans, USA. She has worked as a consultant in several education development projects and taught poverty measurement at the University of Vienna.

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Published
2020-10-29
How to Cite
Pane, J. C., & Hammler, K. (2020). Overcoming Poverty in Multidimensional Poverty Interventions through Self-assessment and Mentoring. Journal De Ciencias Sociales, (15). https://doi.org/10.18682/jcs.vi15.997