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UNDERSTANDING POVERTY

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Because Band-Aids make for poor long-term care and one-size-fits-all solutions typically fit no one well.

Poverty speaks of more than economics. At its core, poverty is relational. The financially poor typically describe their condition in social or psychological terms such as inferiority, shame, isolation, and fear as well as a lack of voice and choice. And shame, described by some as a poverty of being, affects the financially rich and poor alike. Poverty involves a loss of purpose, meaning and hope. How we define poverty is crucial as this dictates our solutions or attempts at alleviation. Misdiagnosis is common and symptoms are often treated without addressing root causes. If poverty is relational, it will be in embracing our mutual brokenness and giftedness that we will be empowered to do good without increasing harm.

UPCOMING EVENTS

COLLABORATORS

Ending Poverty Together
Food For The Hungry
Think Tank
COLLABORATORS
Karen Purvis Institute
Trauma Free World
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TRAUMA CARE

Two people eating a meal together

CULTURE AND RECONCILIATION

Person giving homeless person something on the street

UNDERSTANDING POVERTY

Two office people working on computers looking at each other and laughing

HEALTHY COLLABORATION

Person walking on dirt road in forest towards sunrise

MENTAL HEALTH AND WELLNESS

Can we really end poverty together?

Subtitle

CareImpact Executive Director, Wendi Park, talks with Ending Poverty Together Podcast host, Eric Strom on the value of churches growing in their understanding of poverty.

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