2 results match your criteria: "and fellow of St John's College[Affiliation]"

The Capacity to Surprise: On the Importance of History for Public Health Policy.

Am J Public Health

March 2020

Simon Szreter is professor of history and public policy, University of Cambridge, and fellow of St John's College, Cambridge, UK.

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Health by association? Social capital, social theory, and the political economy of public health.

Int J Epidemiol

August 2004

Faculty of History and Fellow of St John's College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1TP, UK.

Three perspectives on the efficacy of social capital have been explored in the public health literature. A "social support" perspective argues that informal networks are central to objective and subjective welfare; an "inequality" thesis posits that widening economic disparities have eroded citizens' sense of social justice and inclusion, which in turn has led to heightened anxiety and compromised rising life expectancies; a "political economy" approach sees the primary determinant of poor health outcomes as the socially and politically mediated exclusion from material resources. A more comprehensive but grounded theory of social capital is presented that develops a distinction between bonding, bridging, and linking social capital.

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