The handbook not only addresses questions concerning individual, collective, and institutional responsibility towards people in extreme poverty and the moral wrong of poverty, but it also tackles emerging applied issues that are connected to poverty such as gender, race, education, migration, and climate change. Additionally, it features perspectives on poverty from the history of Western philosophy, as well as non-Western views that explore issues unique to the Global South. Finally, the chapters in the first part provide an overview of the most important aspects of social science poverty research, which serves as an excellent resource for philosophers and philosophy students unfamiliar with how poverty is empirically researched in practice.
The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy and Poverty is an essential resource for students and researchers in philosophy, political science, sociology, development studies, and public policy who are working on poverty.
Gottfried Schweiger has been working as Senior Scientist at the Centre for Ethics and Poverty Research at the University of Salzburg since 2011. Schweiger has published extensively on (global) justice, poverty, childhood, the capability approach, and migration.
Clemens Sedmak is Co-director of the Centre for Ethics and Poverty Research at the University of Salzburg and Professor of Social Ethics at the University of Notre Dame. He is a philosopher and theologian who works at the intersection of philosophical and theological social ethics.