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Advancing Health Rights Through Community Development & Pp - by Neil Quinn & Anuj Kapilashrami
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Highlights
- In a world facing multiple intersecting crises, the push for healthier, more resilient societies has never been more urgent.
- About the Author: Anuj Kapilashrami is Professor of Global Health Policy and Equity and Director of the Centre for Global Health and Intersectional Equity Research at the University of Essex.
- 240 Pages
- Medical, Health Policy
Description
Book Synopsis
In a world facing multiple intersecting crises, the push for healthier, more resilient societies has never been more urgent. This timely book reveals how empowered and organised communities can lead this change. It offers policy makers, academics, and activists research-driven insights, decolonial perspectives and real-world examples of organising and collective actions from across the global North and South.
By centring on the power of community development, participation, and social movements, the book delivers actionable frameworks to tackle inequality and advance the right to health, making it an essential resource for anyone committed to health justice and for building equitable and sustainable health systems worldwide.
Review Quotes
"I strongly recommend this rich, accessible, interdisciplinary, challenging book. It comes from the head and heart. Theory and praxis. Professional and personal. Intersectionality and decoloniality are woven throughout to offer a distinctive gaze to several mainstream discourses on participation and health rights. It's replete with instructive case studies. The authors focus on health, but they speak to anyone committed to a more just world." Paul Hunt, first UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health & Chief Commissioner for New Zealand Human Rights Commission
"This comprehensive overview of community development and collective action for health justice creatively bridges theory and practice. The focus on countervailing power from below offers a timely counterpoint - both to top-down approaches to community consultation and to the conventional framing of social determinants of health in terms of individual characteristics." Jonathan Fox, American University
"Social and health inequalities worldwide have never been so great. These crises have many economic and policy causes, yet perhaps the greatest systemic problem is the lack of public engagement in co-creating solutions. This fine and wise book shows how communities can participate and make changes that improve lives. A superb insight into how to create better futures." Jules Pretty, University of Essex
"This book is a rich resource of analysis and examples on inequality, participation/power and rights in health. The authors' research and experience in India and other regions show the widespread impacts in marginalised populations north and south of a neo-colonial, neoliberal political economy. Their sharp unbundling of disempowering narratives, and examples and critical reflections shared on local, national, and transnational level responses make it relevant for a range of academic, practitioners and activists linking knowledge to change." Rene Loewenson, Training and Research Support Centre, Zimbabwe
About the Author
Anuj Kapilashrami is Professor of Global Health Policy and Equity and Director of the Centre for Global Health and Intersectional Equity Research at the University of Essex.
Neil Quinn is Professor of Social Work and Health Equity and Founding Director of the Centre for Health Policy at the University of Strathclyde.
Abhijit Das is Managing Trustee of the Centre for Health and Social Justice in New Delhi and Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Global Health at the University of Washington.