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In situations where inequality and ethnicity are important aspects of poverty, policymakers need to understand the range of strategies people use to survive. Different groups within communities use different livelihood strategies, according to their wealth. To achieve sustainable development, policies must be targeted at their varying needs. Research from the SOAS Centre for Development, Environment and Policy, University of London, in the UK, analyses the resource use and livelihood strategies adopted by different groups within two rural Mayan communities in the south-Eastern Mexican state of Yucatán. The researcher suggests various ways in which access to markets and services can help reduce poverty. Despite the focus of the Millennium Development Goals on poverty reduction, halving ‘the proportion of the population living on less than $1 a day’ fails to address the elements of inequality that characterise poverty. In Mexico, stark regional disparities in terms of education, infrastructure and poverty are often linked to ethnicity. Indigenous Mayan communities such as those in Yucatán State are particularly deprived. Studies of poverty and inequality in Latin America have tended to generalise, with some researchers suggesting people can escape poverty by migrating to urban areas, developing agriculture or diversifying into non-farm occupations with government support. But the extent to which people in marginalised regions can integrate into the wider economy varies, and depends mostly upon the assets they possess and the resources they have access to. Understanding of the local context is essential. The Mayas’ dependence on agricultural and forest resources means their development has to be ecologically and economically sustainable. The Mayan communities studied, Mahas and Poop, remain economically isolated. Key findings regarding successful livelihood strategies include:
While the poorest people use maize production subsidies as a safety net, wealthier groups engage in the maize economy commercial enterprise. It therefore provides not just subsidies and subsistence but also the cash income that comes from trading maize products. Different policies to create a broader asset base must be applied at different socio-economic levels:
Before appropriate development interventions can be identified, and poverty and sustainability issues addressed, a detailed understanding of poor people’s assets, strategies and the local context is required. Source(s): Funded by: Department for International Development (UK) id21 Research Highlight: 27 April 2008
Further Information: Tel:
+44 (0)20 78984050 SOAS Centre for Development, Environment and Policy, London, UK Other related links:
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