Abstract

1. Introduction Keetie Roelen and Laura Camfield PART I: POVERTY MEASUREMENT 2. Mixed methods in poverty measurement: qualitative perspectives the 'necessities of life' in the 2012 PSE-UK survey Eldin Fahmy, Eileen Sutton and Simon Pemberton 3. Deprivation and social citizenship: the objective significance of lived experience Daniel Edmiston 4. Bringing context to multidimensional poverty: added value and challenges of mixed methods approaches Neil Dawson 5. Measuring the resilience of vulnerable households in Burkina Faso Lucrezia Tincani and Nigel Poole PART II: EVALUATION RESEARCH 6. Assessing rural transformations: piloting a qualitative impact protocol in Malawi and Ethiopia James Copestake and Fiona Remnant 7. Evaluating the impacts that impact evaluations don't evaluate Stephen Devereux and Keetie Roelen PART III: FROM RESEARCH TO POLICY 8. An inclusive proposal for the use of mixed methods in studying poverty: an application to a Colombian municipality Maria Fernanda Torres and Edna Bautista Hernandez 9. Challenges and Insights from mixed method impact evaluations in protracted refugee situations Sally Burrows and Marian Read 10. Competing interpretations: human wellbeing and the use of quantitative and qualitative methods J. Allister McGregor, Sarah Coulthard and Laura Camfield 11. Conclusion Laura Camfield and Keetie Roelen

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