CONCEPTS W9 Flashcards

1
Q

Procedural Justice

A

The justice that is seeded through the process of decision making, where decision making processes are unbiased and balanced.

Thibaut & walker 1975

Social outcomes - can apply to all decisions, even economic policy decisions
Health outcomes - Public health policy and access

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2
Q

Universal health care

A

All people should have access to healthcare without the risk of great financial hardship. Protection against the economic consequences of ill health.

WHO 2005

Social - Less financial hardship
Health - Better overall access to healthcare

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3
Q

UBI

A

baseline income for all citizens regardless of income. This would likely be around $16,000NZD to aid the ability for citizens to be lifted out of poverty.

Max Rashbrooke

Social outcomes - fewer rates of poverty, reduced absolute economic inequality but no impact on relative inequality (everyone gets it)
Health outcomes - Less financial hardship, better access to health care

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4
Q

Progressive taxation

A

A redistributive police aimed at reducing economic and intergenerational inequality. This would be achieved through having higher tax brackets for those with higher incomes, capital gains tax and/or death tax.

Bill Rosenberg

Social outcomes - Redistribution of wealth, all though high wealth earners with income from sources that cannot be taxed (housing and stocks) are unaffected.
Health outcomes - aids social mobility and thus health access

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5
Q

Progressive universalism

A

A policy in which healthcare can be provided universally but charged based on family income

Social outcomes - Lesser financial burden of healthcare for lower SES groups.
Health outcomes - better access to health care for low SES groups as the expenses are relative to income

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6
Q

community development

A

A set of activities delivered to the community. A holistic approach grounded in virtues of empowerment human rights, inclusion, social justice, self determination and collective action.

aifs.govt.au

Social outcomes - better social inclusion and participation
Health outcomes - Health education

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7
Q

affirmative action

A

Policies that are designed to reduce or redress historical forms of discrimination based on demographic distinctions among employees

Ministry of Women 2013

Social outcomes - Better job chances for minorities (ethnic, gender, disability, religious)
Health outcomes - social mobility, higher SEP better health outcomes

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8
Q

moral licensing

A

Doing one justice encouraging act justifies not being so in other areas

Social outcomes - one good act justifies other discriminatory behaviours
Health outcomes - Discrimination and marginalisation of certain groups enforces poor health outcomes

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9
Q

fantasy paradigm

A

A phenomenon in which practitioners believe that structural problems can be solved through individual interventions

Mckenzie et al

Social outcomes - waste of resources, blaming
Health outcomes - Waste of resources, micro-aggressions, blaming, futile problem solving

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10
Q

social movements

A

A loosely organised campaign that is driven to implement or prevent change in societal structure and/or values.

Smelser et al

Social outcomes - positive pressure towards paradigm shifts that change issues within society
Health outcomes - side-steps institutional policy processes to expedite health policy change

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