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Unit information: Inequalities in Health, Poverty and Development in 2014/15

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Unit name Inequalities in Health, Poverty and Development
Unit code SPOL31021
Credit points 20
Level of study H/6
Teaching block(s) Teaching Block 1 (weeks 1 - 12)
Unit director Professor. Gordon
Open unit status Not open
Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

School/department School for Policy Studies
Faculty Faculty of Social Sciences and Law

Description including Unit Aims

According to the World Health Organisation &+the world's biggest killer and the greatest cause of ill health and suffering across the globe is listed almost at the end of the International Classification of Diseases. It is given code Z59.5 -- extreme poverty&*. The possibility of improving the health of the world&)s population by ending poverty during the 21st Century has gained increasing public and political support. This unit will examine the scientific and policy debates on how to reduce inequalities in health and eradicate poverty using a sustainable development approach.

Intended Learning Outcomes

On completion of the unit, students will:

  • Be well informed on the academic and policy debate on poverty,exclusion and inequalities in health.
  • Have a clear understanding of the concepts of poverty, development and inequalities in health, including gender, disability and age inequalities.
  • Be able to discuss different definitions and meanings of ‘poverty’, ‘inequality’ and ‘exclusion’ both in a UK and in a global context.
  • Be able to identify and discuss key data on patterns of global poverty and inequalities in resources and health.
  • Be familiar with theoretical and empirical analysis of the causal pathways running, in both directions, between health and material living standards (wealth, inequality).
  • Have a clear understanding of the right to health care and the rationing of scarce resources, and the impact of both on global inequalities in health.

Teaching Information

Lectures and seminars including student led presentations.

Assessment Information

Formative assessment: Poster presentation in small group, within seminar time.

Summative assessment: One 3000 word essay from a list of titles.

Reading and References

  • Besley, T. and Burgess, R. (2003) Halving Global Poverty, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 17(3), 3-22.
  • Hofrichter R (Ed) (2003) Health and Social Justice: politics, ideology and inequality in the distribution of disease. San Francisco, John Wiley & Sons.
  • Leon D & Walt G (2001) Poverty, Inequality and Health: an international perspective Oxford University Press
  • Townsend, P. and Gordon D. (2002) World poverty: New policies to defeat an old enemy. Bristol: Policy Press
  • UNDP (2003) Human Development Report 2003: Millennium Development Goals a compact among nations to end human poverty. Oxford.

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