Abstract
How is poverty discursively constituted, both as a category of thinking and as a label applied
to particular social categories in times of austerity? How is it linked to social exclusion?
Based on extensive fieldwork with representatives from 79 typical non-governmental
organizations and informal initiatives of civil society in two Greek cities (Athens and Patras,
in the periphery), this chapter explores the link between crisis, poverty and social exclusion.
In their attempt to underline the marginalizing effects of austerity in Greece, civil society
actors question previous assumptions about what constitutes poverty and exclusion in Greek
society and offer important insights into the seemingly disparate practices and experiences
among those classified as “poor” or “new excluded”.