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Implications of structure versus agency for addressing health and well-being in our ecologically constrained world: With a focus on prospects for gender equity

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Walls, Helen
Butler, Colin
Dixon, Jane
Samarawickrema, Indira

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Indiana University Press

Abstract

The long-standing debate in public health and the wider society concerning the implications of structure and agency for health and well-being generally concludes that structure powerfully influences agency, and does so unequally, exacerbating social and health inequities. In this article, we review this debate in the context of increasing environmental degradation and resource depletion. As the global population rises and environmental resources per person shrink, conflicts over the underlying factors contributing to human health and well-being may intensify. A likely result of nearing limits is a further constraint of agency, for both rich and poor, and greater social and health inequities, including gender inequities.

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International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics

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2037-12-31
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