destitute$20651$ - meaning and definition. What is destitute$20651$
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What (who) is destitute$20651$ - definition

19TH-CENTURY AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTION FOR HOUSING THE DESTITUTE
Destitute asylum; Destitute Asylum; Benevolent Asylum

Benevolent Asylum         
The Destitute Asylums (usually known as Benevolent Asylums or [for the destitute) were institution]s established throughout the colonies of [[Australia in the 19th century to house destitute men and deserted, vagrant or homeless women, their children and orphans not able to support themselves. Poor conditions in the sleeping quarters and harsh treatment in some of these institutions created unpleasant experiences for many of those who had to reside in such places.
destitute         
  • thumb
  • Extreme Poverty projection by the World Bank to 2030
  • website=data.worldbank.org}}</ref>
  • Share of the population living in extreme poverty in selected parts of the world
  • Share of population living in multidimensional poverty in 2014
  • Sustainable Development Goals
  • Less than $1.90 a day}}
  • Other high income countries}}
  • UNO Conference 2011, on least developed countries
  • Various projections for the prospect of ending extreme poverty by 2030. The ''y''-axis represents the percentage of people living in extreme poverty worldwide.
  • USAID Urban Search and Rescue team Fairfax County performs search and rescue operations in Haiti, 17 January 2010.
  • United Nations Headquarters, Geneva
  • United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Logo
  • USAID logo
  •  Nations of the World Bank Group (WBG)
  • World Bank logo
CONDITION CHARACTERIZED BY SEVERE DEPRIVATION OF BASIC HUMAN NEEDS AND IT IS REALLY BAD
Penury; Absolute poverty; Destitute; Destitution; Poorest; Abject poverty; Severe poverty; Extreme poor; Extremely poor; Socially subjective poverty
['d?st?tju:t]
¦ adjective
1. extremely poor and lacking the means to provide for oneself.
2. (destitute of) not having.
Derivatives
destitution noun
Origin
ME (in the sense 'deserted, abandoned, empty'): from L. destitut-, destituere 'forsake'.
destitution         
  • thumb
  • Extreme Poverty projection by the World Bank to 2030
  • website=data.worldbank.org}}</ref>
  • Share of the population living in extreme poverty in selected parts of the world
  • Share of population living in multidimensional poverty in 2014
  • Sustainable Development Goals
  • Less than $1.90 a day}}
  • Other high income countries}}
  • UNO Conference 2011, on least developed countries
  • Various projections for the prospect of ending extreme poverty by 2030. The ''y''-axis represents the percentage of people living in extreme poverty worldwide.
  • USAID Urban Search and Rescue team Fairfax County performs search and rescue operations in Haiti, 17 January 2010.
  • United Nations Headquarters, Geneva
  • United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Logo
  • USAID logo
  •  Nations of the World Bank Group (WBG)
  • World Bank logo
CONDITION CHARACTERIZED BY SEVERE DEPRIVATION OF BASIC HUMAN NEEDS AND IT IS REALLY BAD
Penury; Absolute poverty; Destitute; Destitution; Poorest; Abject poverty; Severe poverty; Extreme poor; Extremely poor; Socially subjective poverty
n.
Indigence, want, need, poverty, penury, privation.

Wikipedia

Benevolent asylum

Benevolent asylums, also known as destitute asylums or infirmaries for the destitute, were institutions established throughout the colonies of Australia in the 19th century to house destitute men; deserted, vagrant or homeless women and their children; and orphans not able to support themselves. Poor conditions in the sleeping quarters and harsh treatment in some of these institutions created unpleasant experiences for many of those who had to reside in such places.

The colony of Victoria had nine benevolent asylums, of which three were attached to hospitals, in 1857, with an annual cost to the colony (including some building costs) of £124,250.

By January 1860 there were 11 benevolent asylums in the colony of New South Wales, housing 1,282 inmates and with a total annual expenditure of £25,822.