Article(electronic)November 20, 2023

Buen Vivir, subjective poverty, and school conditions in 2017 Ecuador

In: Poverty & public policy: a global journal of social security, income, aid, and welfare, Volume 15, Issue 4, p. 447-463

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Abstract

AbstractIn May 2017 in Ecuador, the government of Rafael Correa handed over the presidency after 10 years and several mandates. His administration established the redefinition of the constitutional bases: the buen vivir cultural development and policy approach with a new transformative educational policy that sought to contribute to inclusion, overcoming inequalities, and poverty. His government benefited from high oil and commodity prices and broad popular support. This research has set out to review the results of the official national survey ENEMDU completed in December 2017. With a descriptive, bivariate, and multidimensional quantitative data analysis, we sought to shed light on the correlations between subjective poverty associated with buen vivir, school conditions, and ICT access and use of the school population in 2017. Results indicate a critical flaw in the buen vivir policies that failed to achieve their most valued and declared objective with indigenous and rural populations.

Languages

English

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN: 1944-2858

DOI

10.1002/pop4.383

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