Regimes of inequality : the political economy of health and wealth / Julia Lynch.
Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2020Content type: text | still image Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781107001688; 9781108776141.Subject(s): Poor -- Medical care -- Europe | Poverty -- Health aspects -- Europe | Equality -- Health aspects -- Europe | Health services accessibility -- Europe | Welfare state -- EuropeGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 362.1086942 Online resources: Click here to access online - 1 user.Item type | Current library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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ebook | House of Lords Library - Palace Online access | ELECTRONIC RESOURCES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 2021-1101 |
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Electronic book available via the Ebook Central platform.
Explaining resilient inequalities in health and wealth -- Theorizing regimes of inequality : welfare, neoliberalism, and the reframing of a social problem -- Health inequalities : the emergence of an international consensus policy frame -- New Labour, the redistributive taboo, and reframing inequality in England after the Black Report -- Inequality, territory, austerity : health equity in France since the U-turn -- From risk factors to social determinants : how the changing Social Democratic welfare regime in Finland reframed health inequality -- In and out of the Overton window : how talking about health inequality made the problem harder to solve -- Regimes of inequality -- Appendix : content analysis of government and commissioned health inequality reports.
"A spectacular thirty-meter high viaduct spans the Ouseburn river as it makes its way through Newcastle-upon-Tyne, in the northeast corner of England. Modern, bright-yellow and black tram cars ply the viaduct, bringing passengers from working-class Byker to more affluent South Gosforth station in a journey that takes roughly ten minutes. But while the Byker viaduct allows riders to traverse the physical chasm carved out by the Ouseburn with ease, the social differences that separate residents of Byker from their better-off neighbors are much harder to bridge. Twice as many children in Byker (two in five) live in poverty as in Gosforth. And while a fifty-five-year-old man from Gosforth can expect to live another seventeen years in good health, the average fifty-five-year-old in Byker has only another nine years of healthy life expectancy ahead of him (Bambra 2016, 92)"-- Provided by publisher.