0 a situation in which some people who are poor or who do not have a job do not feel part of the rest of society --
By the 1990s the majority of people were employed in the tertiary sector, including middleclass occupations, yet unemployment and social exclusion remain.
It provides a bridge between the public health and social exclusion agenda, steering both towards interventions targeted at groups vulnerable to social disadvantage.
The second reason to doubt the claims made for disqualification as an increasingly important source of social exclusion relates to the direction of change.
Discrimination and a degree of social exclusion reinforced the sense that they stood outside the ' established ' cultural norms.
We mentioned in the introduction that the much debated and disputed interface between agency and structure is a feature of the social exclusion debate.
The cost may be the primacy of cultural recognition over questions of racial discrimination and social exclusion.
Never-married women were particularly vulnerable to social exclusion and destitution, because they had not complied with the cultural norms (adat) of marriage and raising children.
Poverty and social exclusion are the greatest threats to the wellbeing and independence of older people.