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Publications

CPRC's publications database contains over 300 publications. These include concise policy briefs and research summaries; a series of over 100 academic working papers, and further series published by country partners; academic and professional journal articles; Chronic Poverty Reports and books; and papers presented at CPRC conferences and workshops.

You can search for a particular publication by title, author or date - or pull out selections based on our research themes, the type of publication, or a number of suggested searches on relevant development topics. You can also use the open search engine on the right hand side of the page to search the whole CPRC website for anything you choose.

You can also find a wealth of other related material and references on the CPRC Bibliographic Database (opens in new window).

Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 3 - Where do chronically poor people live?

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 5 - What should be done about chronic poverty?

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 6 - Understanding chronic poverty in sub-Saharan Africa

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 7 - understanding chronic poverty in South Asia

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 8 - Understanding chronic poverty in Latin America and the Caribbean

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 9 - understanding chronic poverty in transitional countries

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 10 - understanding chronic poverty in China

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Chapter 11 - Measuring global trends on chronic poverty, a statistical appendix

CPRC (2004)

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Chronic Poverty Report 2004-05: Glossary, References, Further Reading

CPRC (2004)

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The State of the Poorest in Bangladesh: tales of ascent, descent, marginality and persistence

Binayak Sen and David Hulme (eds) (2004)

Chronic Poverty Report
This study examines what has been happening to the poorest people in Bangladesh over recent times.11 Around 31% of the rural population presently suffer the indignity of chronic poverty—low consumption, hunger and under-nutrition, lack of access to basic health services, illiteracy and other...

Latest Publications

Remoteness and chronic poverty in a forest region of Southern Orissa

The recent round of poverty estimates, placing Orissa as the poorest state in India, has pressed an...

Aid approaches and strategies for reaching the poorest

An analysis of the patterns of development known to assist and reach the poorest people is used to...