Step 1 Select a dimension of ex/inclusion Open
Exclusion and inequality operate along social, civic, political, cultural and economic axes. These dimensions form a self-reinforcing circle. They serve, in essence, as triggers and/or transmission channels. Deprivation in one of them often results in precariousness and marginalization in the rest.
For example, the circle could be set in motion by exclusion from education, including life-long learning, and result in unemployment and overall underperformance in the economic dimension. This factor could, in return, feed into further social service deprivation in terms of health care and/or social protection, reduced participation in political and civic life, and hampered involvement in cultural affairs.
Such multi-dimensionality and progressivity make inclusion a critical lens for policy design and delivery. They translate into four inclusive policy markers.
Step 2 Select an Inclusive Policy Marker Open
Inclusive development should be approached as an explicit and overarching objective that cuts across sectoral policies. This requires political commitment and technical coherence of all policies that contribute to it. Three key considerations elaborate on why and how this can be done.
Step 3 Select a Policy Design Consideration
No standalone policy can succeed in fully and sustainably releasing the exclusion and inequality trap. Their built-in multidimensionality requires inclusive policies that are designed, unlike traditional anti-poverty agendas, to operate at once and in an integrated manner along the social, civic, political, cultural and economic axes. Think of them as a system or a portfolio of policy interventions targeting all of these axes of deprivation. Removing just one of them will not undo the others.
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