Abstract

People living in extreme poverty or social exclusion mainly come from poor families, and their social difficulties tend to become chronic. This situation appears to be especially pronounced in countries with lower levels of development. This article analyzes different aspects of people (n = 99) who make their living collecting trash from dumps in León, Nicaragua, one of the countries with the lowest levels of development in Latin America. This group is difficult to access, heavily stigmatized, lives in chronic and extreme poverty and their families were also poor. The results show that the pickers in León whose families were poorest had the highest illiteracy rates, were poorest in health, had experienced more stressful life events, and had poorer future expectations. Negative health and life circumstances, low levels of education, and fatalism may lead to the pickers’ situations of social exclusion becoming chronic.

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