Research Topics
| Sandra CarlisleSummaryAffiliation: University of Glasgow Country: UK Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Is 'modern culture' bad for our health and well-being?Phil Hanlon
Public Health and Health Policy Section, Faculty of Medicine, Glasgow University, Glasgow, UK
Glob Health Promot 16:27-34. 2009..However, the research does suggest that positive responses are also possible...
Well-being and consumer culture: a different kind of public health problem?Sandra Carlisle
Public Health and Health Policy, Glasgow University, Glasgow, UK
Health Promot Int 22:261-8. 2007..As the four discourses carry different implications for action, we conclude by considering their varied utility and applicability for health promotion...
Status, taste and distinction in consumer culture: acknowledging the symbolic dimensions of inequalitySandra Carlisle
Public Health and Health Policy, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8RZ, UK
Public Health 122:631-7. 2008..Therefore, this article suggests processes whereby people can develop the self-awareness needed to resist the glossy illusions of the good life represented by modern consumer capitalism...
'Wellbeing': a collateral casualty of modernity?Sandra Carlisle
Public Health and Health Policy Section, University of Glasgow, UK
Soc Sci Med 69:1556-60. 2009..However, increasing concerns for the environment have the potential to counter some of these trends, and in so doing could also contribute to our wellbeing as individuals and as social beings in a finite world...
Thesis: Do we face a third revolution in human history? If so, how will public health respond?Phil Hanlon
Department of Public Health and Health Policy, University of Glasgow Medical School, Glasgow, UK
J Public Health (Oxf) 30:355-61. 2008....
Learning our way into the future public health: a propositionPhil Hanlon
Centre for Population Health Sciences, School of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, 1 Lilybank Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RZ, UK
J Public Health (Oxf) 33:335-42. 2011..This analysis suggests that public health needs a new approach. We set out propositions and models that could help us learn our way into the future...
