Abstract

ABSTRACT Civil society initiatives played a key role in the increasing academic focus on poverty in mid-1960s Europe. The first generation of academic poverty researchers were able to draw on the expertise of civil society actors who, since the 1950s, had been carrying out their own research to counter a lack of scholarly interest. While the ‘rediscovery’ of poverty as a research topic in academic circles has received scholarly attention, the research efforts of their non-academic counterparts have been overlooked. Building on recent work in the history of knowledge, this article focuses on poverty-related research in Belgium by both academic and non-academic knowledge producers. We assess whether and how both types of knowledge co-existed and possibly interacted. We also demonstrate how, due to a lack of academic interest in the 1950s, research on poverty in Belgium became crucial for civil society actors. From the mid-1960s onwards, the renewed academic interest in poverty facilitated interactions between established civil society researchers and academic scholars, but these interactions were complicated by a growing divergence in methods and goals. Through the lens of poverty, this article expands on our understanding of the development of research in the social sciences.

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