Advancing gender transformative intersectional science for health justice: An ecosocial analysis
At a time when health-oriented institutions both globally and nationally are increasingly recognizing the need to support research, interventions and training that engage with analysis of how gendered social systems shape population health, independent of and in conjunction with sex-linked biology,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Social science & medicine (1982) 2024-06, Vol.351, p.116151-116151, Article 116151 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | At a time when health-oriented institutions both globally and nationally are increasingly recognizing the need to support research, interventions and training that engage with analysis of how gendered social systems shape population health, independent of and in conjunction with sex-linked biology, it is essential that this work reject biological essentialism and instead embrace embodied integration. In this essay, guided by the ecosocial theory of disease distribution, I clarify connections and distinctions between biological versus social reproduction and inheritance, underscore the non-equivalence of the categories “sex” and “race,” and offer a set of examples analyzing the production of gendered health inequities and who needs to do what to address them. The examples concern the worlds of work (sexual harassment; breastfeeding; sex work), ecologic environments (water access; fracking, sexually transmitted infections, & sexual violence); sexual reproduction and reproductive justice (gender stereotyping of reproductive biology; sterilization abuse and abortion bans); and (4) gender transformative initiatives (violence; health interventions). To advance gender transformative intersectional science for health justice, I offer recommendations regarding requirements for justifying data conceptualization, analysis and governance that can be implemented by institutions with the power to shape the funding, translation, and publication of science involving gender, sex-linked biology, and the people's health.
•Gender transformative intersectional science for health justice is needed.•One useful guide for this work is the ecosocial theory of disease distribution.•Rejecting biological essentialism, the focus is on emergent embodied phenotypes.•Examples of concern: work, environment, sexual reproduction, and interventions.•Recommendations concern data conceptualization, analysis and governance. |
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ISSN: | 0277-9536 1873-5347 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116151 |