4.5 Review Book Chapter

Measures of Racism, Sexism, Heterosexism, and Gender Binarism for Health Equity Research: From Structural Injustice to Embodied Harm-An Ecosocial Analysis

期刊

ANNUAL REVIEW OF PUBLIC HEALTH, VOL 41
卷 41, 期 -, 页码 37-62

出版社

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-publhealth-040119-094017

关键词

gender identity; health equity; heterosexism; racism; sexism; structural injustice

资金

  1. American Cancer Society, Clinical Research Professor Award
  2. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (Boston, Massachusetts)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Racism. Sexism. Heterosexism. Gender binarism. Together, they comprise intimately harmful, distinct, and entangled societal systems of self-serving domination and privilege that structure the embodiment of health inequities. Guided by the ecosocial theory of disease distribution, I synthesize key features of the specified isms and provide a measurement schema, informed by research from both the Global North and the Global South. Metrics discussed include (a) structural, including explicit rules and laws, nonexplicit rules and laws, and area-based or institutional nonrule measures; and (b) individual-level (exposures and internalized) measures, including explicit self-report, implicit, and experimental. Recommendations include (a) expanding the use of structural measures to extend beyond the current primary emphasis on psychosocial individual-level measures; (b) analyzing exposure in relation to both life course and historical generation; (c) developing measures of anti-isms; and (d) developing terrestrially grounded measures that can reveal links between the structural drivers of unjust isms and their toll on environmental degradation, climate change, and health inequities.

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