Cover image for Unhealthy Societies : The Afflictions of Inequality.
Unhealthy Societies : The Afflictions of Inequality.
Title:
Unhealthy Societies : The Afflictions of Inequality.
Author:
Wilkinson, Richard G.
ISBN:
9780203421680
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (268 pages)
Contents:
Book Cover -- Title -- Contents -- List of illustrations -- Preface -- Introduction: the social economy of health -- Health becomes a social science -- Rising life expectancy and the epidemiological transition -- The problem of health inequalities -- Income distribution and health -- A small town in the USA, wartime Britain, Eastern Europe and Japan -- An anthropology of social cohesion -- The symptoms of disintegration -- The psychosocial causes of illness -- Baboons, civil servants and children's height -- Social capital: putting Humpty together again.
Abstract:
Among the developed countries it is not the richest societies which have the best health, but those which have the smallest income differences between rich and poor. Inequality and relative poverty have absolute effects: they increase death rates. But why? How can smaller income differences raise average life expectancy? Using examples from the USA, Britain, Japan and Eastern Europe, and bringing together evidence from the social and medical sciences, Unhealthy Socities provides the explanation. Healthy, egalitarian societies are more socially cohesive. They have a stronger community life and suffer fewer of the corrosive effects of inequality. As well as inequality weakening the social fabric, damaging health and increasing crime rates, Unhealthy Societies shows that social cohesion is crucial to the quality of life. The contrast between the material success and social failure of modern societies marks an imbalance which needs attention. The relationship between health and equality suggests that important social needs will go unmet without a larger measure of social and distributive justice. This path-breaking book is essential reading for health psychologists, sociologists, welfare economists, social policy analysts and all those concerned with the future of developed societies.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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