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Area Effects on Behaviour and Lifestyle: The Spatiality of Injustice

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Neighbourhood Structure and Health Promotion

Abstract

This chapter concerns area-effect studies on behaviour and lifestyle. It begins by making the distinction between behaviour, lifestyle and collective lifestyles. A critical element to collective lifestyles, in distinction from behaviour or lifestyle alone, is then discussed, the role of structural constraints and opportunities in shaping people’s actions. From there, the idea is entertained that the massive urbanisation of the last few decades brings to the fore not only the role of these constraints and opportunities but also their inequitable distribution at the neighbourhood level. Some of the most commonly used theories in health promotion and social epidemiology to explain the relationship between area effects and health-related behaviours are then described. The effects of the inequitable distribution of opportunities and constraints on behaviour across space are then considered. In so doing, a well-developed discussion from within social geography regarding spatial injustice is drawn on. The chapter ends with a description of a novel theoretical approach, the Interdisciplinary Study of Inequalities in Smoking (ISIS) framework, developed by researchers in Montreal, Canada.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    While capitals, according to Bourdieu, are essentially distributed by class, in order to understand how capitals can empirically influence health outcomes, we operationalise capitals at the individual level, remaining conscious that this operationalisation is but a stand-in for a collective phenomenon.

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Correspondence to Katherine L. Frohlich .

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Frohlich, K.L. (2013). Area Effects on Behaviour and Lifestyle: The Spatiality of Injustice. In: Stock, C., Ellaway, A. (eds) Neighbourhood Structure and Health Promotion. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-6672-7_3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-6672-7_3

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