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Risk, resistance and the neoliberal agenda: young people, health and well-being in the UK, Canada and Australia
journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by S Brown, J Shoveller, C Chabot, Tony LaMontagneTony LaMontagneIn this article we describe how concepts of risk are both generated by and used to reinforce a neoliberal agenda in relation to the health and well-being of young people. We examine how risk may be used as a tool to advance ideals such as rational choice and individual responsibility, and how this can further disadvantage young people living within the contexts of structural disadvantage (such as geographic areas of long-term unemployment; communities that experience racial discrimination). We also identify the ways in which risk is applied in uneven ways within structurally disadvantaged contexts. To suggest a way forward, we articulate a set of principles and strategies that offer up a means of resisting neoliberal imperatives and suggest how these might play out at the micro-, meso- and macro-levels. To do this, we discuss examples from the UK, Canadian and Australian contexts to illustrate how young people resist being labelled as risky, and how it is possible to engage in health equity-enhancing actions, despite seemingly deterministic forces. The cases we describe reveal some of the vulnerabilities (and hence opportunities) within the seemingly impenetrable world view and powers of neoliberals, and point towards the potential to formulate an agenda of resistance and new directions for young people's health promotion.
History
Journal
Health, risk and societyVolume
15Issue
4Pagination
333 - 346Publisher
RoutledgeLocation
Oxford, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
1369-8575eISSN
1469-8331Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2013, Taylor & FrancisUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
RiskHealth policyNeoliberal shiftsYoung people's healthStructural disadvantage\/social inequitiesScience & TechnologySocial SciencesLife Sciences & BiomedicinePublic, Environmental & Occupational HealthSocial Sciences, BiomedicalBiomedical Social Sciencesstructural disadvantagesocial inequitiesWOMENS ACCOUNTSSMOKINGEXPERIENCESCONSTRUCTIONPERSPECTIVESGOVERNMENTALCOHOLSMOKERSociology