Social Exclusion: A Concept in Need of Definition

Volume 4|Issue 14| Autumn 2015 |Translation

Abstract

“Social exclusion” is a debatable term, not only  because it is used to refer to a wide range of phenomena and processes related to poverty, deprivation and hardship, but also because it is used to depict a vast variety of excluded people and places of exclusion. This article presents some facts related to the confusing and complex nature of this concept in both the European Union and New Zealand.

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Associate Professor in Research and Evaluation, School of People, Environment and Planning, Massey University, New Zealand. ​

Professor of Sociology, Al-Mustansiriya University, Iraq.

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