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Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town

[missing pages: 60,77,80,91] Human deprivation represents a contemporary 'paradox of development' that urgently nee4J to be addressed at the city scale. This research explores the argument that confusion over the measurement of human deprivation still exists, despite various development initiatives,...

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Main Author: Fontaine, Danielle
Other Authors: Parnell, Susan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fontaine, Danielle
author2 Parnell, Susan
author_browse Fontaine, Danielle
Parnell, Susan
author_facet Parnell, Susan
Fontaine, Danielle
author_sort Fontaine, Danielle
collection Thesis
description [missing pages: 60,77,80,91] Human deprivation represents a contemporary 'paradox of development' that urgently nee4J to be addressed at the city scale. This research explores the argument that confusion over the measurement of human deprivation still exists, despite various development initiatives, in part because of a disconnect between contemporary development discourse and the research tools used to identify and investigate the poor. Development discourse defines human deprivation according to elements of difference, diversity and the dynamic nature of human needs; research tools identify and investigate human needs based on homogeneity, similarity and a fixed status quo. To explore the implications of this disconnect for human deprivation at the city scale, three concepts namely, poverty, chronic poverty and vulnerability, and the practical tools of socio-economic indicators and geographical information systems (GIS) are interrogated and critiqued for their usefulness for mapping human deprivation at the city scale. Poverty, chronic poverty, and vulnerability are three integral concepts of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs); they highlight different aspects of deprivation including, amongst others, multiple dimensions, temporality and change, and biophysical risk, respectively. Socio-economic indicators and GIS are tools currently used by various disciplines, research institutions and levels of government in an array of research and practical applications. Socio-economic indicators are a method of converting qualitative data into quantitative data, and GIS can be used to translate these quantitative data into visual representations, thereby revealing spatial distributions. Socio-economic indicators hence provide the ''link" between the theoretical and the visual. Socio-economic indicators and GIS are useful, and in the case of GIS, contingent tools, but do have limitations to their application at the city scale that originate from the availability of appropriate data.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:38:07.696Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40229 Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town Fontaine, Danielle Parnell, Susan Environmental and Geographical Science [missing pages: 60,77,80,91] Human deprivation represents a contemporary 'paradox of development' that urgently nee4J to be addressed at the city scale. This research explores the argument that confusion over the measurement of human deprivation still exists, despite various development initiatives, in part because of a disconnect between contemporary development discourse and the research tools used to identify and investigate the poor. Development discourse defines human deprivation according to elements of difference, diversity and the dynamic nature of human needs; research tools identify and investigate human needs based on homogeneity, similarity and a fixed status quo. To explore the implications of this disconnect for human deprivation at the city scale, three concepts namely, poverty, chronic poverty and vulnerability, and the practical tools of socio-economic indicators and geographical information systems (GIS) are interrogated and critiqued for their usefulness for mapping human deprivation at the city scale. Poverty, chronic poverty, and vulnerability are three integral concepts of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs); they highlight different aspects of deprivation including, amongst others, multiple dimensions, temporality and change, and biophysical risk, respectively. Socio-economic indicators and GIS are tools currently used by various disciplines, research institutions and levels of government in an array of research and practical applications. Socio-economic indicators are a method of converting qualitative data into quantitative data, and GIS can be used to translate these quantitative data into visual representations, thereby revealing spatial distributions. Socio-economic indicators hence provide the ''link" between the theoretical and the visual. Socio-economic indicators and GIS are useful, and in the case of GIS, contingent tools, but do have limitations to their application at the city scale that originate from the availability of appropriate data. 2024-07-02T10:26:19Z 2024-07-02T10:26:19Z 2005 2024-06-25T13:13:23Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40229 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Science
Fontaine, Danielle
Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town
title_full Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town
title_fullStr Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town
title_short Combining theoretical concepts and tools: mapping human deprivation in the City of Cape Town
title_sort combining theoretical concepts and tools mapping human deprivation in the city of cape town
topic Environmental and Geographical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40229
work_keys_str_mv AT fontainedanielle combiningtheoreticalconceptsandtoolsmappinghumandeprivationinthecityofcapetown