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How Does Child Disadvantage Change with Age? An Analysis of Australian Children

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 06:50 authored by Ankita MishraAnkita Mishra, Ranjan Ray, Leonora Risse
This paper applies a dynamic multidimensional measure of disadvantage to examine how the nature and extent of disadvantage experienced by a child can vary throughout their childhood. We use two longitudinal datasets to track a cohort of Australian children from around 4 to at least 10 years of age, comparing the experiences of Indigenous children to the broader Australian child population. Our analysis confirms that Indigenous children not only experience worse rates of disadvantage than the rest of the Australian child population at all ages, but that this gap widens further as children grow older. For all Australian children, the highest rates of disadvantage are detected in “bullying” and “body weight,” with rates of unhealthy body weight worsening with age. The empirical findings of this study can inform age-targeted policy design; while the methodological contributions have relevance for other countries aiming to target the well-being of disadvantaged socioeconomic groups.

History

Journal

Journal of Human Development and Capabilities

Volume

19

Issue

4

Start page

477

End page

498

Total pages

22

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2018 Human Development and Capability Association

Former Identifier

2006084279

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-02-21

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