This volume brings together 24 researchers from around the world to analyse a series of case studies of developed, emerging and developing countries. They study the evolution or decline observed in these countries and propose some answers to the issue of the way in which the economic model influences how the social question is taken into account around the world. A closer look reveals that the manner in which this question is addressed largely determines how the evolution of the world is perceived. While the contributors here highlight how capitalism makes it possible to reflect on the issue of social protection, they also show the limits of policies unable to guarantee this protection as soon as the economic situation can no longer allow countries to bear its costs.
Emmanuel Matteudi is a Professor and the Director of the Institute of Urban and Regional Development at Aix-Marseille University, France, and a member of the Environment and Urban Planning Interdisciplinary Laboratory. An expert on poverty in developing countries, he has engaged in research and expertise activities for almost 20 years for central governments, local governments, research organisations, NGOs and agencies of the United Nations. His most recent book, Le développement local en Afrique ou comment repenser la pauvreté, received the Turgot Award in 2013.