1. It's not just pills and potions? Depoliticising health inequalities policy in England.
- Author
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Qureshi, Kaveri
- Subjects
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HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH policy , *FIELDWORK (Educational method) , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL care research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *POLICY science research , *PRACTICAL politics , *PUBLIC administration , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *ETHNOLOGY research , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
In England, health inequalities policy shifted during the Labour term (1997–2010) from initially strong commitments to tackling the ‘upstream’ social determinants of health to a technically-driven emphasis on lifestyle risk factors and healthcare access. This multi-sited study, based in and around Westminster (2006–2007), extends our understanding of how political context influences policy-making by drawing from anthropological studies of policy. Qualitative material from central government is put into conversation with theory concerning policy as zones of practices. The paper explores the bristly process through which public health, healthcare and corporate interests vied to shape the political agenda for health inequalities; the selective use of evidence by civil servants in accordance with their perceptions of what politicians conceive to be electorally palatable; the silencing of critique of the dominant narrative about evidence-based policy; and how technical aids developed a life of their own – as a result of which, health inequalities policy ended up being depoliticised. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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