-
DE MURO PASQUALE
(
syllabus)
A. Introduction to the capability approach
Functionings, capabilities, agency. Freedoms and capabilities. Standard of living, well- being, and agency achievements. Comparison with other approaches. Evaluating capabilities and functionings. Putting the capability approach to work. Case studies.
Essential readings
Alkire, S., “Capability and Functionings: Definition & Justification”, Briefing Note, Human Development and Capability Association, 2005. (https://hd-ca.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/HDCA_Briefing_Concepts.pdf)
Alkire S. and Deneulin S., “The Human Development and Capability Approach”, in Deneulin S. with Shahani L.(eds.), An Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach: Freedom and Agency, Earthscan, London, 2009, chap. 2 (https://www.idrc.ca/en/book/introduction-human-development-and-capability- approach-freedom-and-agency)
Sen, A., “Development as Capability Expansion”, Journal of Development Planning, no. 19, pp. 41-58, 1989 (reprinted in Fukuda-Parr S. and A. K. Shiva Kumar. Readings in human development: concepts, measures, and policies for a development paradigm. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003)
Sen, A. Development as Freedom, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999, chap. III
B. Human Development: concept and measurement
These lectures will firstly introduce the human development approach, proposed in 1990 by ul Haq, the director of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). This approach has its theoretical background in Amartya Sen’s capability approach and provides an alternative framework for the analysis of development issues to the one advocated by other institutions, such as the World Bank. Since 1990 on the UNDP has published yearly the Human Development Reports, which focus on specific topics related to human development and describe and interpret country performances following some key indicators.
In a second step, we will focus on the measurement of human development. Before presenting the official indicators elaborated by the UNDP, we will discuss, from a theoretical point of view, how it is possible to encapsulate a complex and multi-faceted concept such as human development into one single index or a dashboard of indices. As an example, we will discuss educational indicators. Then, the most important indicators – the (old and new) Human Development Index, the Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index and the Gender Inequality Index – will be analyzed in- depth. In particular, attention will be drawn to the development dimensions considered, to the variables chosen to measure such dimensions, to the standardization procedure and, finally, to the methods used to aggregate the dimensions into one single composite index. As a conclusion, some cross-country comparisons will be made.
Essential readings:
Sen, Amartya. 1999. “Development as Freedom”, Chapter “The Ends and the Means of Development”.
Stewart, F. (2019): The Human Development Approach: An Overview. Oxford Development Studies 47(2), 135-153.
UNDP. 2019. Human Development Report 2019, Technical notes, http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/hdr2019_technical_notes.pdf (for the calculation of the HDI and the MPI).
C. Education
In traditional economic theories, education is considered as the central pillar of “human capital”, an input to be included in the production function. The lecture will briefly review the role of education within these growth-led theories of development and then move towards more people-centered approaches to development. Only with the capability approach education has been investigated in a comprehensive way, recognizing its intrinsic role and multiple economic and social benefits. The lecture will show the direct implications of choosing one approach as compared to another in the design and evaluation of an educational project. The class will also focus on different ways of measuring education. Different educational indicators will be adopted to understand the effects of national and international policies in this sector. The last part of the class will concentrate on the existing evidence of the effects of different (educational and non-educational) policies on educational indicators.
Essential readings:
Sen, A.K. (1999), Development as Freedom (ed. A. Knopf), sub-chapter “Human Capital and Human Capability” (last section of the book).
Unterhalter, E. (2009), “Education”, chapter 9 in S. Deneulin and L. Shahani Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach. Downloadable at: https://idl-bnc-idrc.dspacedirect.org/bitstream/handle/10625/40248/IDL-40248.pdf
D. Health
Goals:
- Introduction to the debate between health and development
- Health within the capability approach (importance of conversion factors, agency
and empowerment, process, etc)
- Introduce the field of global health and the MDGs and SDGs on health
- Examine key global health indicators and inequalities within and across
countries in such indicators, with a specific focus on the context of social determinants of health
Essential readings
Ariana, P., Naveed, A. (2009), “Health”, chapter 10 in S. Deneulin and L. Shahani Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach. Downloadable at: https://idl-bnc-idrc.dspacedirect.org/bitstream/handle/10625/40248/IDL-40248.pdf
Marmot, M. & Commission on Social Determinants of Health (2007). Achieving health equity: from root causes to fair outcomes. Lancet 370: 1153-63. Available at: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(07)61385-3/fulltext
E. Poverty
The main objective of this lecture is to analyse different approaches to poverty. We will start with the traditional, monetary approach and distinguish between absolute and relative poverty, and between national and international poverty lines. The main indices of monetary poverty will be introduced and discussed with concrete examples. These are: the headcount ratio, the poverty gap and the squared poverty gap. Overall world and regional trends in income poverty will be examined.
The second part of the lecture will focus on measures of multidimensional poverty, especially those grounded on the capability approach. All the different steps required to measure poverty in a multidimensional space will be analysed, starting from the identification of the relevant dimensions of poverty and concluding with the selection of indices to aggregate multiple components into one single index of poverty. The last part will be devoted to the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) elaborated by OPHI and adopted by the UNDP. The main technicalities, together with its limitations will be presented. During the whole class, different exercises will be carried out. The last lecture of this class will present recent global trends in income and multidimensional poverty.
Essential readings:
Alkire, S. and Santos, E. (2009), “Poverty and Inequality Measurement”, chapter 6 in S. Deneulin and L. Shahani Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach. Downloadable at: https://idl-bnc- idrc.dspacedirect.org/bitstream/handle/10625/40248/IDL-40248.pdf
UNDP. 2010. “Human Development Report 1990”: pp. 94-100 (“Measuring poverty— the Multidimensional Poverty Index). http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/human- development-report-2010
F. Social protection
Goals:
• Understand key concepts of social protection and social policy (e.g. basic services, social insurance, social assistance, labour market policies, contributory vs non-contributory etc)
• Discuss how social protection evolved in the Global South over time and which are the most common approaches used now (e.g. cash transfers, school feeding, etc)
• Be able to reflect on the potential of social protection for human development, and nutrition, health and education in particular, through examples in current research
Essential Readings
Merrien, F. X. (2013). Social Protection as Development Policy. A New International Agenda for Action. Available open access at: https://journals.openedition.org/poldev/1525
Drake, L., et al. (2017). School feeding programs in middle childhood and adolescence. In Disease Control Priority 3 volume 8. Available open access at:
http://dcp-3.org/chapter/2428/school-feeding
Alderman, H. (2016): Leveraging social protection programs for improved nutrition: Summary of evidence prepared for the global forum on nutrition-sensitive social protection programs. Pages 1-10 only mandatory (the remainder of the paper is considered a non-essential reading although it provides interesting discussions of cash transfers and school feeding for nutrition). Available open access at: https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/24450
G.The capability approach to food security
Brief critical review of main analytical approaches to food security: food availability, income-based, basic needs, entitlement, sustainable livelihoods, food insecurity experience, capability. Operationalizing the capability approach to food security.
Essential readings
Burchi, F. and De Muro, P. “From food availability to nutritional capabilities: Advancing food security analysis”. Food Policy, 2016 (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306919215000354)
United Nations Development Programme, Africa Human Development Report 2012: Towards a Food Secure Future, New York: UN Publications, 2012, chap. 1 (https://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/librarypage/hdr/africa-human- development-report-2012.html)
H. Sustainable Human Development
This group of classes will start with the exploration of conceptual issues for examining sustainability from the lens of capability approach. Sustainability as inter-generational fairness issue and sustainable human development to be compatible with protecting the natural environment are explored.
Then, we will engage in the discussion of specific challenges related to sustainable human development. The first one is water scarcity and the implications for Sustainable Development Goal 6. The second one concerns mineral rich societies and the more general analysis of the role that institutions and policies play for sustainable human development. The third one is the challenge of applying the capability approach and sustainable human development at the city level.
Essential readings
Anand S and Amartya Sen (2000) Human development and economic sustainability. World Development 28, No. 12, pp. 2029-2049.
Anand PB. (2010) Scarcity, entitlements and the economics of water in developing countries. Chapter 8.
Anand, PB. (2018) Cities and the capability approach, chapter in Comim F, Fennell S, and Anand PB (ed) New Frontiers of the Capability Approach, Cambridge University Press.
(
reference books)
A. Introduction to the capability approach
Functionings, capabilities, agency. Freedoms and capabilities. Standard of living, well- being, and agency achievements. Comparison with other approaches. Evaluating capabilities and functionings. Putting the capability approach to work. Case studies.
Essential readings
Alkire, S., “Capability and Functionings: Definition & Justification”, Briefing Note, Human Development and Capability Association, 2005. (https://hd-ca.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/HDCA_Briefing_Concepts.pdf)
Alkire S. and Deneulin S., “The Human Development and Capability Approach”, in Deneulin S. with Shahani L.(eds.), An Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach: Freedom and Agency, Earthscan, London, 2009, chap. 2 (https://www.idrc.ca/en/book/introduction-human-development-and-capability- approach-freedom-and-agency)
Sen, A., “Development as Capability Expansion”, Journal of Development Planning, no. 19, pp. 41-58, 1989 (reprinted in Fukuda-Parr S. and A. K. Shiva Kumar. Readings in human development: concepts, measures, and policies for a development paradigm. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003)
Sen, A. Development as Freedom, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999, chap. III
B. Human Development: concept and measurement
These lectures will firstly introduce the human development approach, proposed in 1990 by ul Haq, the director of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). This approach has its theoretical background in Amartya Sen’s capability approach and provides an alternative framework for the analysis of development issues to the one advocated by other institutions, such as the World Bank. Since 1990 on the UNDP has published yearly the Human Development Reports, which focus on specific topics related to human development and describe and interpret country performances following some key indicators.
In a second step, we will focus on the measurement of human development. Before presenting the official indicators elaborated by the UNDP, we will discuss, from a theoretical point of view, how it is possible to encapsulate a complex and multi-faceted concept such as human development into one single index or a dashboard of indices. As an example, we will discuss educational indicators. Then, the most important indicators – the (old and new) Human Development Index, the Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index and the Gender Inequality Index – will be analyzed in- depth. In particular, attention will be drawn to the development dimensions considered, to the variables chosen to measure such dimensions, to the standardization procedure and, finally, to the methods used to aggregate the dimensions into one single composite index. As a conclusion, some cross-country comparisons will be made.
Essential readings:
Sen, Amartya. 1999. “Development as Freedom”, Chapter “The Ends and the Means of Development”.
Stewart, F. (2019): The Human Development Approach: An Overview. Oxford Development Studies 47(2), 135-153.
UNDP. 2019. Human Development Report 2019, Technical notes, http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/hdr2019_technical_notes.pdf (for the calculation of the HDI and the MPI).
C. Education
In traditional economic theories, education is considered as the central pillar of “human capital”, an input to be included in the production function. The lecture will briefly review the role of education within these growth-led theories of development and then move towards more people-centered approaches to development. Only with the capability approach education has been investigated in a comprehensive way, recognizing its intrinsic role and multiple economic and social benefits. The lecture will show the direct implications of choosing one approach as compared to another in the design and evaluation of an educational project. The class will also focus on different ways of measuring education. Different educational indicators will be adopted to understand the effects of national and international policies in this sector. The last part of the class will concentrate on the existing evidence of the effects of different (educational and non-educational) policies on educational indicators.
Essential readings:
Sen, A.K. (1999), Development as Freedom (ed. A. Knopf), sub-chapter “Human Capital and Human Capability” (last section of the book).
Unterhalter, E. (2009), “Education”, chapter 9 in S. Deneulin and L. Shahani Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach. Downloadable at: https://idl-bnc-idrc.dspacedirect.org/bitstream/handle/10625/40248/IDL-40248.pdf
D. Health
Goals:
- Introduction to the debate between health and development
- Health within the capability approach (importance of conversion factors, agency
and empowerment, process, etc)
- Introduce the field of global health and the MDGs and SDGs on health
- Examine key global health indicators and inequalities within and across
countries in such indicators, with a specific focus on the context of social determinants of health
Essential readings
Ariana, P., Naveed, A. (2009), “Health”, chapter 10 in S. Deneulin and L. Shahani Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach. Downloadable at: https://idl-bnc-idrc.dspacedirect.org/bitstream/handle/10625/40248/IDL-40248.pdf
Marmot, M. & Commission on Social Determinants of Health (2007). Achieving health equity: from root causes to fair outcomes. Lancet 370: 1153-63. Available at: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(07)61385-3/fulltext
E. Poverty
The main objective of this lecture is to analyse different approaches to poverty. We will start with the traditional, monetary approach and distinguish between absolute and relative poverty, and between national and international poverty lines. The main indices of monetary poverty will be introduced and discussed with concrete examples. These are: the headcount ratio, the poverty gap and the squared poverty gap. Overall world and regional trends in income poverty will be examined.
The second part of the lecture will focus on measures of multidimensional poverty, especially those grounded on the capability approach. All the different steps required to measure poverty in a multidimensional space will be analysed, starting from the identification of the relevant dimensions of poverty and concluding with the selection of indices to aggregate multiple components into one single index of poverty. The last part will be devoted to the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) elaborated by OPHI and adopted by the UNDP. The main technicalities, together with its limitations will be presented. During the whole class, different exercises will be carried out. The last lecture of this class will present recent global trends in income and multidimensional poverty.
Essential readings:
Alkire, S. and Santos, E. (2009), “Poverty and Inequality Measurement”, chapter 6 in S. Deneulin and L. Shahani Introduction to the Human Development and Capability Approach. Downloadable at: https://idl-bnc- idrc.dspacedirect.org/bitstream/handle/10625/40248/IDL-40248.pdf
UNDP. 2010. “Human Development Report 1990”: pp. 94-100 (“Measuring poverty— the Multidimensional Poverty Index). http://hdr.undp.org/en/content/human- development-report-2010
F. Social protection
Goals:
• Understand key concepts of social protection and social policy (e.g. basic services, social insurance, social assistance, labour market policies, contributory vs non-contributory etc)
• Discuss how social protection evolved in the Global South over time and which are the most common approaches used now (e.g. cash transfers, school feeding, etc)
• Be able to reflect on the potential of social protection for human development, and nutrition, health and education in particular, through examples in current research
Essential Readings
Merrien, F. X. (2013). Social Protection as Development Policy. A New International Agenda for Action. Available open access at: https://journals.openedition.org/poldev/1525
Drake, L., et al. (2017). School feeding programs in middle childhood and adolescence. In Disease Control Priority 3 volume 8. Available open access at:
http://dcp-3.org/chapter/2428/school-feeding
Alderman, H. (2016): Leveraging social protection programs for improved nutrition: Summary of evidence prepared for the global forum on nutrition-sensitive social protection programs. Pages 1-10 only mandatory (the remainder of the paper is considered a non-essential reading although it provides interesting discussions of cash transfers and school feeding for nutrition). Available open access at: https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/24450
G.The capability approach to food security
Brief critical review of main analytical approaches to food security: food availability, income-based, basic needs, entitlement, sustainable livelihoods, food insecurity experience, capability. Operationalizing the capability approach to food security.
Essential readings
Burchi, F. and De Muro, P. “From food availability to nutritional capabilities: Advancing food security analysis”. Food Policy, 2016 (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306919215000354)
United Nations Development Programme, Africa Human Development Report 2012: Towards a Food Secure Future, New York: UN Publications, 2012, chap. 1 (https://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/librarypage/hdr/africa-human- development-report-2012.html)
H. Sustainable Human Development
This group of classes will start with the exploration of conceptual issues for examining sustainability from the lens of capability approach. Sustainability as inter-generational fairness issue and sustainable human development to be compatible with protecting the natural environment are explored.
Then, we will engage in the discussion of specific challenges related to sustainable human development. The first one is water scarcity and the implications for Sustainable Development Goal 6. The second one concerns mineral rich societies and the more general analysis of the role that institutions and policies play for sustainable human development. The third one is the challenge of applying the capability approach and sustainable human development at the city level.
Essential readings
Anand S and Amartya Sen (2000) Human development and economic sustainability. World Development 28, No. 12, pp. 2029-2049.
Anand PB. (2010) Scarcity, entitlements and the economics of water in developing countries. Chapter 8.
Anand, PB. (2018) Cities and the capability approach, chapter in Comim F, Fennell S, and Anand PB (ed) New Frontiers of the Capability Approach, Cambridge University Press.