Income Inequality, Social Cohesion, and Class Relations: A Critique of Wilkinson's Neo-Durkheimian Research Program
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Journal of Health Services
- Vol. 29 (1), 59-81
- https://doi.org/10.2190/g8qw-tt09-67pl-qtnc
Abstract
Wilkinson's “income inequality and social cohesion” model has emerged as a leading research program in social epidemiology. Public health scholars and activists working toward the elimination of social inequalities in health can find several appealing features in Wilkinson's research. In particular, it provides a sociological alternative to former models that emphasize poverty, health behaviors, or the cultural aspects of social relations as determinants of population health. Wilkinson's model calls for social explanations, avoids the subjectivist legacy of U.S. functionalist sociology that is evident in “status” approaches to understanding social inequalities in health, and calls for broad policies of income redistribution. Nevertheless, Wilkinson's research program has characteristics that limit its explanatory power and its ability to inform social policies directed toward reducing social inequalities in health. The model ignores class relations, an approach that might help explain how income inequalities are generated and account for both relative and absolute deprivation. Furthermore, Wilkinson's model implies that social cohesion rather than political change is the major determinant of population health. Historical evidence suggests that class formation could determine both reductions in social inequalities and increases in social cohesion. Drawing on recent examples, the authors argue that an emphasis on social cohesion can be used to render communities responsible for their mortality and morbidity rates: a community-level version of “blaming the victim.” Such use of social cohesion is related to current policy initiatives in the United States and Britain under the New Democrat and New Labor governments.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- Should the mission of epidemiology include the eradication of poverty?The Lancet, 1998
- Whither studies on the socioeconomic foundations of population health?American Journal of Public Health, 1997
- The Failure of Academic Epidemiology: Witness for the ProsecutionAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1997
- The black report and beyond what are the issues?Social Science & Medicine, 1997
- Beyond Social ClassEpidemiology, 1996
- The Increasing Disparity in Mortality between Socioeconomic Groups in the United States, 1960 and 1986New England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Social research in health and the American sociopolitical context: The changing fortunes of medical sociologySocial Science & Medicine, 1993
- Race or class versus race and class: mortality differentials in the United StatesThe Lancet, 1990
- The Black report on socioeconomic inequalities in health 10 years on.BMJ, 1990
- Recent Research on the Psychological Effects of UnemploymentJournal of Social Issues, 1988