Sorry, no results.
Please try another keyword
Épisode
26 juin 2025 - 43min
Nathalie BajosSanté publique (2024-2025)Collège de FranceAnnée 2024-2025Colloque - La production sociale des inégalités de santé : approches théoriques et données empiriques. Perspectives internationalesSession 3 : Interroger la structuration sociale des inégalités de santé en anthropologie et en épidémiologieGreta Bauer : A New Framework for Understanding Social Privilege and HealthGreta BauerProfessor...
Nathalie BajosSanté publique (2024-2025)Collège de FranceAnnée 2024-2025Colloque - La production sociale des inégalités de santé : approches théoriques et données empiriques. Perspectives internationalesSession 3 : Interroger la structuration sociale des inégalités de santé en anthropologie et en épidémiologieGreta Bauer : A New Framework for Understanding Social Privilege and HealthGreta BauerProfessor and Director, Eli Coleman Institute for Sexual and Gender Health, University of Minnesota Medical SchoolRésuméWhile health research has increasingly included a role for stigma and discrimination in impacting health, privilege is often left to be implicitly understood as a lack of these. This undertheorization of privilege limits our understanding of how social power shapes health. I present a seven-fold model of privilege and its intersectional formation. Privilege is conceptualized as taking seven forms: just and fair experience, allowed harmful ignorance, promotion and facilitation, implicitly understood meaning, respect for autonomy and bodily integrity, successful moves to innocence, and assumed good intentions. Each form can be enacted through interpersonal or structural mechanisms. While this seven-fold model can be applied to individual conceptualizations of privilege (e.g., heterosexual privilege, white privilege), an intersectionality framework is key to understanding how power and privilege differentials operate relationally to affect health. Intersectionality helps explain, for example, why the traditional socioeconomic gradient of health has differential returns for people of different races, gender expressions, and disabilities, or why a generally privileged position such as maleness may not present an advantage when considered in relation to other social positions and contexts. I provide a set of thinking tools for incorporating this seven-fold and intersectional understanding of privilege into public health work.Greta BauerGreta Bauer, PhD, MPH is a Professor and Director of the Eli Coleman Institute for Sexual and Gender Health in the University of Minnesota Medical School. She holds the endowed academic chair in sexual health. Prior to 2022, Dr. Bauer was a Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University in London, Canada, where she held a Sex and Gender Science Chair through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). Dr. Bauer has authored more than 150 peer-reviewed papers, book chapters, and technical reports related to health equity. As an epidemiologist, her focus on sexual and gender health has been both substantive and methodological, with a focus on the impacts of social marginalization. She is a leader in transgender and non-binary health, and in incorporating intersectionality into quantitative research methods.
Afficher plus
Nathalie Bajos
Santé publique (2024-2025)
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - La production sociale des inégalités de santé : approches théoriques et données empiriques. Perspectives internationales
Session 3 : Interroger la structuration sociale des inégalités de santé en anthropologie et en épidémiologie
Greta Bauer : A New Framework for Understanding Social Privilege and Health
Greta Bauer
Professor and Director, Eli Coleman Institute for Sexual and Gender Health, University of Minnesota Medical School
Résumé
While health research has increasingly included a role for stigma and discrimination in impacting health, privilege is often left to be implicitly understood as a lack of these. This undertheorization of privilege limits our understanding of how social power shapes health. I present a seven-fold model of privilege and its intersectional formation. Privilege is conceptualized as taking seven forms: just and fair experience, allowed harmful ignorance, promotion and facilitation, implicitly understood meaning, respect for autonomy and bodily integrity, successful moves to innocence, and assumed good intentions. Each form can be enacted through interpersonal or structural mechanisms. While this seven-fold model can be applied to individual conceptualizations of privilege (e.g., heterosexual privilege, white privilege), an intersectionality framework is key to understanding how power and privilege differentials operate relationally to affect health. Intersectionality helps explain, for example, why the traditional socioeconomic gradient of health has differential returns for people of different races, gender expressions, and disabilities, or why a generally privileged position such as maleness may not present an advantage when considered in relation to other social positions and contexts. I provide a set of thinking tools for incorporating this seven-fold and intersectional understanding of privilege into public health work.
Greta Bauer
Greta Bauer, PhD, MPH is a Professor and Director of the Eli Coleman Institute for Sexual and Gender Health in the University of Minnesota Medical School. She holds the endowed academic chair in sexual health. Prior to 2022, Dr. Bauer was a Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University in London, Canada, where she held a Sex and Gender Science Chair through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). Dr. Bauer has authored more than 150 peer-reviewed papers, book chapters, and technical reports related to health equity. As an epidemiologist, her focus on sexual and gender health has been both substantive and methodological, with a focus on the impacts of social marginalization. She is a leader in transgender and non-binary health, and in incorporating intersectionality into quantitative research methods.
Pas de transcription pour le moment.
Collège de France
Collège de France
Vous devez être connecté pour soumettre un avis.
Collège de France