Families where the head of household was not working due to illness or disability had the lowest average annual income in 2010 at €23,900, compared to €56,537 for families where the head was working. The Irish constitution guarantees equal rights and opportunities for all citizens. It aims to pursue prosperity for the whole nation and cherish all children equally regardless of past divisions.
Neri seminar assessing funding models for water services provision
Lowest Income Families Where Head Not Working Due to Illness or Disability
1.
2.
3. Flourishing
Capacities
No original equality
Families where the head of the household was not at work due to illness or disability had the lowest average annual disposable income in 2010. This was €23,900 compared to €56,537 for those at work. Families where the head of the household was not at work due to illness or disability had the lowest average annual disposable income in 2010. This was €23,900 compared to €56,537 for those at work.
4. The Republic guarantees religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens, and declares its resolve to pursue the happiness and prosperity of the whole nation and all of its parts, cherishing all of the children of the nation equally and oblivious of the differences carefully fostered by an alien government, which have divided a minority from the majority in the past.
5. 1937 Constitution of the Free State of Ireland
43.2.1 Rights of property ‘ought, in civil society, to be regulated by the principles of social justice.’
43.2.2 Laws should reconcile the rights of private property with ‘the exigencies of the common good’
Directive principles of social policy
45.1 ‘promote the welfare of the whole people by securing as effectively as it may, a social order in which justice and charity shall inform all institutions of the national life’
45.2.iv ‘in what pertains to the control of credit the constant and predominant aim shall be the welfare of the people as a whole’
45.4.1 state should manage public affairs ‘to safeguard with especial care the economic interests of the weaker sections of the community’
12. Ireland
13.0%
Dublin City
14.9
Cork City
17.7
Limerick City
18.2
Waterford City
15.3
Galway City
11.9
Leinster
12.7
Munster
13.5
Connacht
12.9
Ulster (part of)
13.1
Percentage of the population reporting a disability. 2011 Census
18. Spatial Typology of EDs
•In order to evaluate the spatial impacts of the selected lifecourse transitions on the distribution of the population we created a simple spatial typology.
•We categorised EDs based on their average population density between 1986 and 2011.
–Very low density: < 10 p/Km2
–Rural Area: 10 – 24 p/Km2
–Ex-Urban Area: 25 – 59 p/Km2
–Peri-Urban Area: 60 – 150 p/Km2
–City, Town and suburb: 150+ p/Km2
•These categories attempt to describe a rural - urban continuum in Ireland
–They are very crude descriptors of space!
•Four of the categories describe much of what is thought of as ‘rural’ areas.
–The categories are held constant for each census wave.
31. From 10% to 47% correspondence in male and female participation rates between 1986 - 2011.
Women and men increasingly work in the same places
32. 0
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
1986
1991
1996
2002
2006
2011
Number of Men Employed
Other
Professional Services
Public Administration and Defence
Transport and Communications
Commerce
Manufacturing and related industries
Construction
Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing
Industrial Structure of Male Employment 1986 - 2011
33. Industrial Structure of Female Employment 1986 - 2011
0
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
1986
1991
1996
2002
2006
2011
Number of Women Employed
Other
Professional Services
Public Administration and Defence
Transport and Communications
Commerce
Manufacturing and related industries
Construction
Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing
34.
35. Ag declines from 33 to 24% of employment. Manufacturing increases slightly. ProfServices grows
36. Ag continues to decline (10%), Manufacturing declines to 14%. Commerce grows from 16 to 20%, Construction (from 8 to 14%)
37. Ag increases slightly, Manufacturing declines slightly. Commerce stable, Professional services grows to 23% of rural employment
46. Responses to economic change (globalisation):
•‘Competitiveness’: Capacity to Respond
–Assumes that those living in rural areas can adjust their capabilities in order to meet changing (labour) market requirements.
•‘Smart’: Capacity to Act
•Local autonomy and supportive governance framework
•Community Engagement (Community leadership capacity???)
•Strong local identity and clear conceptualisation of market position
•Positive attitude on the part of the community to change
•Investment in appropriate public goods
•Access to good education, health and other services
47. Economic Change
•There is no point just dealing with the results of a process that are producing uneven development.
–In other words, there is no point just being reactive to change.
•Communities need the capacity to act not just react.
•There is a limit to what can be achieved from the local level.
•The state and sectoral institutions have a vital role to play as we move from the local level. They have to provide comprehensive and coherent organisation that facilitates democratic decisions about the nature of development which meets the needs of people.
–Critical need for a clear vision and appropriate strategy for different types of rural area.