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comprehending informal care, with a focus on issues of inequality and injustice. These bodies of scholarship—which, respectively, emphasise the political-economic, affective, policy, geographic, and ecological ... Healthy Societies, School of Social and Political Sciences, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, The University of Sydney Informal care occupies a paradoxical place in contemporary societies. It is at once
how broader social, cultural, and political structures influence and shape everyday behaviour (ibid.). According to pragmatists, changing habits is something that we do on a daily basis, at least to ... our way through the world . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Baert , P. 2005 . Philosophy of the social sciences: Towards pragmatism . Cambridge: Polity. Banwell , C. , J. Dixon , D. Broom , and A
, integration agendas, evolving organisational landscapes, and demographic and political change, it is increasingly important to recognise the different meanings and uses of evidence. ... key argument, that evidence takes divergent forms, using a case study of health service reconfiguration in Greater Manchester, UK, culminating in a judicial review (JR). The background and political
practices women engage in. The interpretation extends scholarship on women’s drinking, by adopting a relational approach to identity and linking private care practices and alcohol use to social and political ... relationships, are important for all women, and are shaped by social, economic and political structures. Feminist approaches to care and governmentality Ethics of care ideas are an important area of feminist
Forensic mental health care is situated across both criminal justice and healthcare systems and is subject to political, cultural, legal and economic shifts in these contexts. The implementation of ... health services. The term ‘late modernity’ captures these broad social, political and economic shifts. Garland (2001) proposed that these have influenced the development of two ways in which social
fare any better than their Conservative/Corporatist counterparts once potential confounding economic and political variables were accounted for: countries’ economic status, healthcare spending ... . Starting from a political economy approach, this analysis uses the classic welfare state typology developed by Esping-Andersen (1990) as comparative grounds. A welfare regime, philosophically speaking
Healthcare on both sides of the Atlantic is a highly charged political and economic subject. This work considers US media coverage of the UK’s National Health Service (NHS), an under-researched area ... growing political momentum in the US for a single-payer approach to healthcare (Draper 2019). Even after Joe Biden’s election to the presidency in 2020, the prospects for US healthcare appear to be fraught
materialism; Political economy - Accepted: 18 March 2022 © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2022 Introduction Public health, clinical and behavioural science analyses of the ... , recent work has applied new materialist perspectives to the political economy of health and socio-economic position, replacing essentialist and aggregative models of ‘class’ with an understanding of the
NHS to present a new political economy of health. ... healthcare The political economy of health and healthcare has an extensive established literature far too broad to present beyond a brief review here. Highlights include Marxist theorising on the formation of
“governmentalisation” of human existence (Rose 1990; Walkerdine 2003) , establishes a political logic dominated by a form of “human” profitability (Skeggs 2014). People should, thus, be “subjec ts of value” (Türken ... “equity turn” in palliative care research (2022) and advocates for researchers to take into account “the wider political, institutional, and economic conditions” (p. 10) in which poverty comes to exist and
, designed to control and contain disturbed behaviour and provide care for dependents. Hence psychiatric diagnosis functions as a political device employed to legitimate activities that might otherwise be ... . Social Theory & Health (2010) 8, 370-382. doi:10.1057/sth.2009.11 psychiatric diagnosis; philosophy of mental illness; psychiatry as social control; social construction of mental illness Introduction
Art, English, History, Literature, Music, Philosophy, and Religion. The social sciences include areas of study such as Sociology, Economics, Political Science, Psychology, and Anthropology. the PMP as ... Philosophy majors at the University where this study was conducted (Sociology and Philosophy are representative of the SSH disciplines). We then compared these course lists to the standard required courses for
important to remember here that, albeit stated often in epochal terms—the “entry of life into history (….) into the sphere of political techniques” (1978, pp. 141–142)—Foucault’s announcement of a modern ... the term bio-political was used (in an adjectival and hyphenated form, Foucault 1994b, p. 210) ,1 and the two versions of his The Politics of Health in the eighteenth century (original 1976 and 1979
distancing has produced, Rossolatos (2020) asserts the importance of regarding social distancing not as an epidemiological or political construct or as a task to be implemented but as an ontological reality ... aspects of embodiment, intercorporeality and trust, together with the wider economic and political upheavals caused by the pandemic, has led to a widespread atmosphere of global uncertainty experienced on
) . The meaning and practices of being ‘Man’ are deconstructed as historical and political categories defining the norm and what is normal, that is man, white, European, heterosexual, and neurotypical. An ... , being-in-the world is fundamentally informed by the dimension of care, in Merleau-Monty’s philosophy, the world is one of intercorporeality, that is the interweaving of living bodies and embodied
and checkpoint 300 in occupied Palestine: Bodies, affect, discipline . Political Geography 65 : 17 - 25 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo. 2018 . 04 .004. Holmes , D. , and S.J. Murray . 2011 ... - 182 . Minca , C. , and C.-E. Ong . 2016 . The power of space: The biopolitics of custody and care at the Lloyd Hotel , Amsterdam. Political Geography 52 : 34 - 46 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo
The act of diagnosing gender dysphoria (GD), as in the act of diagnosing any other condition, is structured by socio-cultural, political and economic factors and is conducted by social actors ... , nevertheless, not be so straightforward in the light of the political debate surrounding the self-determination of trans people that has recently taken place there (Hilário 2018). Methods Overview of the study
sanction, we were obliged to prove our ‘normality’ (Fricker 2007) . This historical move is not inevitable. Grassroots collectives could have been left to themselves. It happened because of political
cases of major depressive disorder or anxiety disorders. By considering the persistent traumatising effects of political upheavals and turmoil in China in the previous decades, Kleinman reasoned that ... , depression as a diagnostic label was on the rise. He conceived this transformation as ‘a product of interests and strategies that are themselves embedded in a confluence of historical, social, political, and