000 01008pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b2004 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aBreman, Jan
245 _aReturn of social inequality: a fashionable doctrine
260 _c2004
300 _ap.3869-872.
362 _a28 Aug
520 _aThe agendas of the transnational institutions with a mandate to steer the global economy may focus on combating poverty, but in the neoclassical policies that lie behind them the increasingly vocal message is that the poor masses mainly have themselves to blame for their plight. Deprivation and subordination have not yet been transformed into a policy of systematic exclusion. But the idea seems to have been revived that it is not poverty itself but the impoverished human material that suffers from it that represent an unacceptable burden for the better-off of the world. - Reproduced.
650 _aPoverty
650 _aSocial inequality
773 _aEconomic and Political Weekly
909 _a62304
999 _c62304
_d62304