Emma Samman
University of Oxford
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emma Samman.
Journal of Human Development and Capabilities | 2006
Gustav Ranis; Frances Stewart; Emma Samman
The well‐known Human Development Index (HDI) encompasses only three rather basic aspects of human welfare. This paper aims to go beyond this, by identifying 11 categories of human development. We next propose plausible candidates as indicators of these categories. We then estimate correlations among the indicators within each category, discarding those that are highly correlated with others. This left 39 indicators to encompass the categories. Of these, eight indicators are highly correlated with the HDI and may therefore be represented by it. But 31 are not highly correlated, suggesting that a full assessment of human development requires a much broader set of indicators than the HDI alone. Following the same procedure, we find that under‐five mortality rates perform equally as well as the HDI, and income per capita is less representative of other dimensions of human development. The HDI (and the other two broad indicators) are shown to be worse indicators of the extended categories of human development for OECD countries than for developing countries.
The Journal of Poverty and Social Justice | 2013
Emma Samman; Maria Emma Santos
Chile is an interesting country in which to study the relationship between poverty and subjective wellbeing, having experienced a remarkable fall in poverty over the past two decades. This paper explores how poverty status and transitions in and out of poverty contributed to life satisfaction in the late 2000s. Using new data for 2006 and 2009, we find that poor people were more dissatisfied with life than the non-poor and that income gains did not appreciably affect the satisfaction of the poor while they remained below the poverty line. People who were not poor in either period exhibited higher satisfaction than those who were poor in both periods, while those who escaped poverty between 2006 and 2009 exhibited higher satisfaction than those who remained poor. In addition, people who fell into poverty in 2009 were no more or no less satisfied with their lives than those who were poor in both periods. The evidence suggests poor people may not have adapted to their circumstances, in contrast to much literature exploring income dynamics and life satisfaction, and also that people’s recent experiences appear to affect their perceptions more than more distant ones.
Archive | 2005
Gustav Ranis; Frances Stewart; Emma Samman
International Journal of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Marketing | 2009
Emma Samman; Eilish Mc Auliffe; Malcolm MacLachlan
Archive | 2007
Gustav Ranis; Frances Stewart; Emma Samman
Archive | 2007
Gustav Ranis; Frances Stewart; Emma Samman
Archive | 2018
Frances Stewart; Gustav Ranis; Emma Samman
Archive | 2018
Frances Stewart; Gustav Ranis; Emma Samman
Archive | 2018
Frances Stewart; Gustav Ranis; Emma Samman
Archive | 2018
Frances Stewart; Gustav Ranis; Emma Samman