Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in Childhood

The social exclusion of children is problematic for two reasons. Young people typically inherit their marginal position from their family, and therefore cannot be held responsible for their hardship themselves; and social exclusion in childhood may affect their wellbeing and subsequent development,...

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Main Authors: J. Cok Vrooman, Stella J. M. Hoff, Maurice Guiaux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2015-07-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/129
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spelling doaj-1ba7985a627b426689592382dea819572020-11-25T00:39:10ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032015-07-0134769710.17645/si.v3i4.129154Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in ChildhoodJ. Cok Vrooman0Stella J. M. Hoff1Maurice Guiaux2The Netherlands Institute for Social Research|SCP, The NetherlandsThe Netherlands Institute for Social Research|SCP, The NetherlandsDutch Institute for Employee Benefit Schemes, The NetherlandsThe social exclusion of children is problematic for two reasons. Young people typically inherit their marginal position from their family, and therefore cannot be held responsible for their hardship themselves; and social exclusion in childhood may affect their wellbeing and subsequent development, possibly leading to a “scarring effect” in later life. In this contribution we develop an instrument for measuring social exclusion among children. Social exclusion is regarded as a theoretical construct with four sub-dimensions: material deprivation, limited social participation, inadequate access to social rights, and a lack of normative integration. First we analyse data from a survey of 2,200 Dutch children, which contains a large set of social exclusion items. We applied nonlinear principal components analysis in order to construct a multidimensional scale. Measured in this way, the prevalence of social exclusion among children is 4.5%. Boys and children living in large families are more likely to experience social exclusion than girls and children with few siblings. The parental level of education and dependency on social security benefits are also important driving factors of childhood social exclusion. Subsequently we investigate the scarring effect. Longitudinal administrative income and household data covering 25 years were combined with a new survey of just under 1,000 Dutch adults, a third of whom were poor as a child. The survey assessed their past and current degree of social exclusion, and their health and psychosocial development, educational career, past family circumstances, etc. In an absolute sense scarring turns out to have been limited during this period: a very large majority of those who were poor or excluded as a child are above the threshold values in adult life. However, the “descendants of hardship” are still more likely to be socially excluded as adults than people who grew up in more favourable conditions. A causal analysis suggests that low educational achievements are the main mediator of scarring risks.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/129childrennonlinear principal components analysispovertyscarring effectsocial exclusion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. Cok Vrooman
Stella J. M. Hoff
Maurice Guiaux
spellingShingle J. Cok Vrooman
Stella J. M. Hoff
Maurice Guiaux
Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in Childhood
Social Inclusion
children
nonlinear principal components analysis
poverty
scarring effect
social exclusion
author_facet J. Cok Vrooman
Stella J. M. Hoff
Maurice Guiaux
author_sort J. Cok Vrooman
title Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in Childhood
title_short Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in Childhood
title_full Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in Childhood
title_fullStr Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in Childhood
title_full_unstemmed Descendants of Hardship: Prevalence, Drivers and Scarring Effects of Social Exclusion in Childhood
title_sort descendants of hardship: prevalence, drivers and scarring effects of social exclusion in childhood
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2015-07-01
description The social exclusion of children is problematic for two reasons. Young people typically inherit their marginal position from their family, and therefore cannot be held responsible for their hardship themselves; and social exclusion in childhood may affect their wellbeing and subsequent development, possibly leading to a “scarring effect” in later life. In this contribution we develop an instrument for measuring social exclusion among children. Social exclusion is regarded as a theoretical construct with four sub-dimensions: material deprivation, limited social participation, inadequate access to social rights, and a lack of normative integration. First we analyse data from a survey of 2,200 Dutch children, which contains a large set of social exclusion items. We applied nonlinear principal components analysis in order to construct a multidimensional scale. Measured in this way, the prevalence of social exclusion among children is 4.5%. Boys and children living in large families are more likely to experience social exclusion than girls and children with few siblings. The parental level of education and dependency on social security benefits are also important driving factors of childhood social exclusion. Subsequently we investigate the scarring effect. Longitudinal administrative income and household data covering 25 years were combined with a new survey of just under 1,000 Dutch adults, a third of whom were poor as a child. The survey assessed their past and current degree of social exclusion, and their health and psychosocial development, educational career, past family circumstances, etc. In an absolute sense scarring turns out to have been limited during this period: a very large majority of those who were poor or excluded as a child are above the threshold values in adult life. However, the “descendants of hardship” are still more likely to be socially excluded as adults than people who grew up in more favourable conditions. A causal analysis suggests that low educational achievements are the main mediator of scarring risks.
topic children
nonlinear principal components analysis
poverty
scarring effect
social exclusion
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/129
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