Policy Bites – Premature mortality, politics and the perpetuation of inequality
Event description
Join us for a Policy Bites lunchtime seminar on "Premature mortality of racial minorities and the poor, politics, and the perpetuation of inequality."
Associate Professor Javier Rodríguez from Claremont Graduate University is visiting the Sydney Policy Lab in September.
Light lunch will be provided. Space is limited. Please register to secure your place.
Topic: Premature mortality of racial minorities and the poor, politics, and the perpetuation of inequality
This talk outlines how health outcomes, such as premature mortality, influence politics, and how political processes, in turn, affect health. It reveals often overlooked connections between the demographic contraction of the poor and other vulnerable populations and the racial and socioeconomic composition of electorates. In this presentation, we explore a causal mechanism that places health disparities at the heart of sustained social inequalities in democratic systems. Using examples from the United States, the talk highlights the political and policy effects of selective mortality across subpopulations. We will examine how, by determining who is and who is not available to participate in politics and influence policy, representative yet socially unjust democratic systems set themselves into an inequality trap.
About the speaker
Javier M. Rodríguez is an Associate Professor of Politics and Government and co-Director of the Inequality and Policy Research Center at Claremont Graduate University, where he teaches health policy and research methodology for policy analysis and social science research. Professor Rodríguez is a leading scholar in advancing the “political epidemiology” approach to racial, gender, and socioeconomic disparities in health. His research is among the first to identify the political causes and consequences of U.S. infant mortality, excess mortality among racial minorities, and premature death among poor and working-class individuals. After receiving his Ph.D. from UCLA, Professor Rodríguez completed his postdoctoral training at the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan. He has published numerous articles in multidisciplinary journals, including Social Science & Medicine, International Journal of Epidemiology, Health Affairs, and Journal of Health and Social Behavior, among others. More recently, Professor Rodríguez has been awarded research grants from the Russell Sage Foundation, the Social Security Administration, and the National Institute on Aging to explore the recent halt in life expectancy gains across U.S. subpopulations and the rise in educational and income inequality in life expectancy since 1990.
Format
25 minutes presentation by Associate Professor Rodríguez followed by audience discussion.
Time and location
1:00 pm, Tuesday 10 September.
Seminar Room 203, RD Watt Building (A04), Science Road, The University of Sydney, NSW 2050.
See more information about getting to the Lab.
Accessibility
We are committed to ensuring our spaces are safe, accessible and enjoyable for all. The RD Watt building is fully accessible for people who use wheelchairs or other mobility aids and service animals are welcome. Enter via the rear door of the RD Watt Building, near the entrance to the Social Sciences Building at the University of Sydney. Our meeting and events space is equipped with PA and assistive listening systems.
If you have any other access requirements, please do let us know when you register.
About Policy Bites
The Sydney Policy Lab’s lunchtime seminars – Policy Bites – are a forum for researchers and practitioners to present their exploratory and applied policy work in its early stages. Each public seminar gathers the Lab community in our collaborative space to hear and discuss new research as we exchange ideas across disciplines.
Policy Bites are organised by Dr Kate Harrison Brennan (Director, Sydney Policy Lab), Dr Assel Mussagulova (Lecturer in Public Policy and Public Administration, School of Social and Political Sciences) and Associate Professor Meru Sheel (Sydney School of Public Health).
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