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Who are the ‘bottom billion’? Young people

This resource is part of a series of ‘poverty profiles’ by the Disability Inclusion Helpdesk focused on eight of the most marginalised group-based identities. It responds to the fact that global progress has not benefitted everyone equally, with many individuals remaining marginalised and extremely poor. Often, this is due to identity-based discrimination related to people’s disability status, age, ethnicity, or gender; and geographic disadvantage, for example through conflict or crisis. These disparities are often masked at the country level: with progress measured as an average across the whole population.

This profile summarises evidence on poverty and young people. It focuses on linkages between young people living in poverty and health and education disparities, limited access to livelihood opportunities, and broader exclusion that creates a situation of multidimensional poverty. The profile examines evidence on youth and exclusion in relation to income poverty, health, education, employment, social protection, violence and discrimination, climate change and forced displacement.
 

Date of publication
Publisher
Inclusive Futures
Population
Children and adolescents
Ethnic minorities
Indigenous people
LGBT+ people    
People living in poverty
People with disabilities
Refugees and internally displaced people
Sector
Climate change
Education and skills
Employment
Health
Humanitarian crises
Participation and leadership
Social inclusion   
Social protection
Type of resource
Evidence/literature review
Funding
FCDO-funded resource by partner
Length
Medium (6-20 pages)
Geographical focus
Global
Language
English