Liberal/Individualized Versus Materialist/Structuralist Approaches to Addressing Social and Health Inequalities: Education and Income as Social Determinants of Health

dc.contributor.authorErvin, Avery
dc.contributor.authorRaphael, Dennis
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-15T22:08:20Z
dc.date.available2026-01-15T22:08:20Z
dc.date.issued2025-01-26
dc.description© The Author(s) 2025. This article was published under a Creative Commons CC-BY licence.
dc.description.abstract<b>Background:</b> While consensus exists that the sources of health inequalities are social inequalities brought on by the experience of qualitatively different living and working conditions, means of addressing these conditions continue to be the subject of dispute. Whether to emphasis education or income as a social determinant of health is one such example of differing views on the sources of these inequalities and the means of addressing them. These different emphases are often justified through the narrow examination of the magnitude of statistical relationships between educational attainment and income with health outcomes. <b>Purpose:</b> We offer a broader view, seeing these differing emphases as indicative of contrasting views of the nature of society and means of responding to these inequalities with emphasis on education representing a liberal reformist view of the issue while an emphasis on income representing a materialist structuralist view. <b>Research design and study sample:</b> We examine, the validity of this hypothesis through an analysis of content of five representative publications that consider educational attainment as a social determinant of health and five that do so for income. <b>Analysis and results:</b> We find that the emphasis on education as a social determinant of health focuses on the attributes of the individual and is generally accepting of the structures and processes of the existing economic and political order. In contrast, an emphasis on income - when placed within a materialist analysis - views existing systems as inequitably distributing income and other resources thereby requiring their reform or transformation. <b>Conclusion:</b> Considering evidence of deteriorating living and working conditions for many in Canada and elsewhere, we see the latter emphasis as more useful for understanding and addressing these disturbing developments.
dc.format.mediumPrint-Electronic
dc.identifier.citationErvin A, Raphael D. Liberal/Individualized Versus Materialist/Structuralist Approaches to Addressing Social and Health Inequalities: Education and Income as Social Determinants of Health. Community Health Equity Research & Policy. 2025;46(2):209-228. doi:10.1177/2752535X251316086
dc.identifier.issn2752-535X
dc.identifier.issn2752-5368
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1177/2752535x251316086
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10315/43491
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherSAGE Publications
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 Internationalen
dc.rights.publisherCC BY
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjectPublic health
dc.subjectHealth sciences
dc.subjectGeneric health relevance
dc.subjectReduced inequalities
dc.subjectHumans
dc.subjectSocial determinants of health
dc.subjectIncome
dc.subjectEducational status
dc.subjectHealth status disparities
dc.subjectSocioeconomic factors
dc.subjectPolitics
dc.subjectEducation
dc.subjectHealth inequalities
dc.subject.meshHumans
dc.subject.meshSocial Determinants of Health
dc.subject.meshIncome
dc.subject.meshEducational Status
dc.subject.meshHealth Status Disparities
dc.subject.meshSocioeconomic Factors
dc.subject.meshPolitics
dc.subject.meshHumans
dc.subject.meshPolitics
dc.subject.meshSocioeconomic Factors
dc.subject.meshEducational Status
dc.subject.meshIncome
dc.subject.meshHealth Status Disparities
dc.subject.meshSocial Determinants of Health
dc.subject.meshHumans
dc.subject.meshSocial Determinants of Health
dc.subject.meshIncome
dc.subject.meshEducational Status
dc.subject.meshHealth Status Disparities
dc.subject.meshSocioeconomic Factors
dc.subject.meshPolitics
dc.symplectic.issue2
dc.symplectic.journalCommunity Health Equity Research & Policy
dc.symplectic.pagination209-228
dc.symplectic.subtypeJournal article
dc.symplectic.volume46
dc.titleLiberal/Individualized Versus Materialist/Structuralist Approaches to Addressing Social and Health Inequalities: Education and Income as Social Determinants of Health
dc.typeArticle

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