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eight - Intersecting contexts of oppression within complex public systems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2022

Aaron Pycroft
Affiliation:
University of Portsmouth
Clemens Bartollas
Affiliation:
University of Northern Iowa
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Summary

This chapter is a theoretical discussion developed by two PhD-prepared nursing professors. Our thinking is embedded in more than 55 years of mental health nursing practice and academic experience. Many of these years were spent working with children, youth, adults, families and communities in crisis – those who bump into the most pointy edges of life and society. We have walked along with street youth, domestic violence survivors, refugees, young offenders, women preparing for criminal proceedings and people who misuse substances. We have worked and volunteered in community-based non-profit organisations, hospitals, emergency services, community mental health clinics, provincial and federal governments, and the World Health Organization. We have worked primarily in Canada, but have also been touched by the most vulnerable in communities in Mexico, Cuba and India. We have extensive backgrounds in the application of social sciences to health issues.

Our theoretical standpoint is that of critical feminist theory based in realist ontology/epistemology and complexity science, and we use an intersectionality lens to draw this thread through our discussion. Our strong practice and academic backgrounds ground our thinking in interrogating oppressions and their intersections and public system complexity as they relate to criminal justice. In our academic and practice work, we focus on the social determinants of health (SDH). The primary factors that shape the well-being of individuals, families, communities and nations are not medical treatments or lifestyle choices, but rather the living conditions they experience (Mikkonen and Raphael, 2010). These factors are known as the SDH: employment and working conditions; income and its equitable distribution; education and early childhood development; housing and food security; age; gender; and race. The SDH are also related to the extent to which citizens are ‘provided with the physical, social, and personal resources to identify and achieve personal aspirations, satisfy needs, and cope with the environment’ (Raphael, 2009, p 56). According to the World Health Organization (2008, p 1), the SDH are important markers of inequalities in health and well-being:

The poor health of the poor … is caused by the unequal distribution of power, income, goods, and services, globally and nationally, the consequent unfairness in the immediate, visible circumstances of peoples’ lives – their access to health care, schools, and education, their conditions of work and leisure, their homes, communities, towns, or cities – and their chances of leading a flourishing life.

Type
Chapter
Information
Applying Complexity Theory
Whole Systems Approaches to Criminal Justice and Social Work
, pp. 159 - 180
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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