40 likes | 115 Views
This research delves into the changing institutional landscape of health in post-Soviet contexts, examining the interplay of risk, stress, and enabling resources. By analyzing gender, class, and social change, we uncover how vulnerabilities and social dynamics shape health practices globally.
E N D
Key Questions • What is health? • How do various methods illuminate and obfuscate measures of health? • How does our work challenge or extend existing frameworks and theories? • How does representation matter? • What can our work and this region tell us about health and health practices more globally?
COMPARATIVE FRAME/ METHODS/ MEASUREMENT knowledge, meaning, experience Units and Levels of Analysis Post-Soviet Context: THE CHANGING INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT OF HEALTH (medicine, public health, economy, environment, etc.) RISK STRESS HEALTH Issues Disabling and Enabling Facilitating/Discourage Sources/ Resources Filters States Formal Institutions Social World Informal Networks Families/Communities “Capitals” (social, cultural, economic, symbolic) Gender Status Class Stratification Systems Age (?)
Groupings I. Strategies and Struggles Maggie, Sarah, Jill, Elena and Anna • Vulnerabilities Adriana and Irina, Kevin, Ted, Khatuna, Erin • Social Change/Differentiation Mark, Julie, Jennifer, Sergei
Emails • Group One • Margaret.Paxson@wilsoncenter.org Maggie • jowcz2@uky.edu Jill • sadphill@indiana.edu Sarah • zdrav@socres.spb.ru Elena and Anna • temkina1@mail.wplus.net Group Two • AdrianaBaban@Psychology.Ro Adriana and Irina • Irina_Todorova@post.harvard.edu • kevin.irwin@yale.edu Kevin • tgerber@ssc.wisc.edu Ted • khatuna@prc.utexas.edu Khatuna • ekoch@middlebury.edu Erin Group Three msorensen@unc.edu Mark • jvbrown@uncg.edu Julie • jbb@mail.la.utexas.edu Jennifer • zakharsv@online.ru Sergei <mrfish@email.unc.edu>, <jtwigg@vcu.edu>, <cbuckley@mail.la.utexas.edu>