Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis

In September 2000 The Millennium Summit adopted the UN Millennium Declaration, committing nations to a new global partnership to reduce extreme poverty with a deadline of 2015. Eight Millennium Development Goals were formulated of which the eradication of poverty given top priority. However, Malaysi...

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Main Authors: Majid, M. Rafee, Jaffar, Abdul Razak, Che Man, Noordini, Vaziri, Mehdrad, Sulemana, Mohamed
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61717/2/MohammadRafeeMajid2015_MappingPovertyHotSpotsinPeninsularMalaysia.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61717/
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spelling my.utm.617172017-04-26T05:58:20Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61717/ Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis Majid, M. Rafee Jaffar, Abdul Razak Che Man, Noordini Vaziri, Mehdrad Sulemana, Mohamed TH Building construction In September 2000 The Millennium Summit adopted the UN Millennium Declaration, committing nations to a new global partnership to reduce extreme poverty with a deadline of 2015. Eight Millennium Development Goals were formulated of which the eradication of poverty given top priority. However, Malaysia’s participation with the UN in dealing with poverty, precede this when it committed itself with the United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (1997–2006) programme, which was then reinforced when the Millennium Declaration was made in 2000. Nationally, poverty eradication as well as bridging the inequality gap among the major ethnic groups and states has been the main development goal in Malaysia’s development agenda since independence. In this regards, the principle of “growth with equity” has been the central theme in all Malaysia’s development policies and efforts since independence. Although Malaysia has made significant achievements in reducing the incidence of aggregate poverty across the country from 8.9% in 1995 down to 1.7% in 2012, there still exist pockets of poverty in the rural areas, in certain states/regions and among ethnic groups, as well as in some urban areas. This shows that formulating planning and policy implementation to eradicate poverty now needs to be more spatially focused for the implementation to be more effective. Recognising the incidence of poverty through standard statistical data tables alone is no longer adequate in formulating planning and policy implementation. Through spatial autocorrelation analysis the pattern of distribution of poverty in space over a period of time can easily be visualised and hotspots of incidence of poverty identified. This paper attempts to show how this analysis can assist in focusing efforts to eradicate poverty in Malaysia. 2015 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61717/2/MohammadRafeeMajid2015_MappingPovertyHotSpotsinPeninsularMalaysia.pdf Majid, M. Rafee and Jaffar, Abdul Razak and Che Man, Noordini and Vaziri, Mehdrad and Sulemana, Mohamed (2015) Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis. In: 13th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association (APSA), 12-14 August, 2015, Skudai, Johor.
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic TH Building construction
spellingShingle TH Building construction
Majid, M. Rafee
Jaffar, Abdul Razak
Che Man, Noordini
Vaziri, Mehdrad
Sulemana, Mohamed
Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis
description In September 2000 The Millennium Summit adopted the UN Millennium Declaration, committing nations to a new global partnership to reduce extreme poverty with a deadline of 2015. Eight Millennium Development Goals were formulated of which the eradication of poverty given top priority. However, Malaysia’s participation with the UN in dealing with poverty, precede this when it committed itself with the United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (1997–2006) programme, which was then reinforced when the Millennium Declaration was made in 2000. Nationally, poverty eradication as well as bridging the inequality gap among the major ethnic groups and states has been the main development goal in Malaysia’s development agenda since independence. In this regards, the principle of “growth with equity” has been the central theme in all Malaysia’s development policies and efforts since independence. Although Malaysia has made significant achievements in reducing the incidence of aggregate poverty across the country from 8.9% in 1995 down to 1.7% in 2012, there still exist pockets of poverty in the rural areas, in certain states/regions and among ethnic groups, as well as in some urban areas. This shows that formulating planning and policy implementation to eradicate poverty now needs to be more spatially focused for the implementation to be more effective. Recognising the incidence of poverty through standard statistical data tables alone is no longer adequate in formulating planning and policy implementation. Through spatial autocorrelation analysis the pattern of distribution of poverty in space over a period of time can easily be visualised and hotspots of incidence of poverty identified. This paper attempts to show how this analysis can assist in focusing efforts to eradicate poverty in Malaysia.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Majid, M. Rafee
Jaffar, Abdul Razak
Che Man, Noordini
Vaziri, Mehdrad
Sulemana, Mohamed
author_facet Majid, M. Rafee
Jaffar, Abdul Razak
Che Man, Noordini
Vaziri, Mehdrad
Sulemana, Mohamed
author_sort Majid, M. Rafee
title Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis
title_short Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis
title_full Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis
title_fullStr Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis
title_full_unstemmed Mapping poverty hot spots in Peninsular Malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis
title_sort mapping poverty hot spots in peninsular malaysia using spatial autocorrelation analysis
publishDate 2015
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61717/2/MohammadRafeeMajid2015_MappingPovertyHotSpotsinPeninsularMalaysia.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61717/
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score 13.214268