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      For Public Sociology

      American Sociological Review
      SAGE Publications

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          The methodology of scientific research programmes

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            The Academic Caste System: Prestige Hierarchies in PhD Exchange Networks

            V. Burris (2004)
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              Embodied health movements: new approaches to social movements in health.

              Social movements organised around health-related issues have been studied for almost as long as they have existed, yet social movement theory has not yet been applied to these movements. Health social movements (HSMs) are centrally organised around health, and address: (a) access to or provision of health care services; (b) health inequality and inequity based on race, ethnicity, gender, class and/or sexuality; and/or (c) disease, illness experience, disability and contested illness. HSMs can be subdivided into three categories: health access movements seek equitable access to health care and improved provision of health care services; constituency-based health movements address health inequality and health inequity based on race, ethnicity, gender, class and/or sexuality differences; and embodied health movements (EHMs) address disease, disability or illness experience by challenging science on etiology, diagnosis, treatment and prevention. These groups address disproportionate outcomes and oversight by the scientific community and/or weak science. This article focuses on embodied health movements, primarily in the US. These are unique in three ways: 1) they introduce the biological body to social movements, especially with regard to the embodied experience of people with the disease; 2) they typically include challenges to existing medical/scientific knowledge and practice; and 3) they often involve activists collaborating with scientists and health professionals in pursuing treatment, prevention, research and expanded funding. This article employs various elements of social movement theory to offer an approach to understanding embodied health movements, and provides a capsule example of one such movement, the environmental breast cancer movement.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Sociological Review
                American Sociological Review
                SAGE Publications
                0003-1224
                1939-8271
                February 2005
                February 2005
                : 70
                : 1
                : 4-28
                Article
                10.1177/000312240507000102
                ab1fc539-24f5-4a93-8351-7a772ae7c9d1
                © 2005
                History

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