The crucial aspects of the (macro) political economy of health

Authors

  • Santiago dived Department of Geography and Urban Planning, Faculty of Humanities, Jamaica

Abstract

The critical political economy of health offers different explanations for the social causes of health and the social factors determining the distribution of these causes. However, the relational, post-anthropocentric and monist ontology of the new materialisms overcomes this complexity, while retaining a critical focus. In this perspective, the social, economic and political relations of capitalism act upon bodies and other matter in everyday events, rather than as ‘social structures’. Using a conceptual toolkit of ‘affect’, ‘assemblage’, ‘capacity’ and ‘micropolitics’, the paper asks the question: ‘what does capitalism do?’ The re-analysis of the social and economic relations of capitalism in terms of a production-assemblage and a market-assemblage reveals not only the workings of capitalist accumulation, but also how previously-unremarked more-than-human affects in these assemblages simultaneously produce uncertainty, waste and inequalities. This micropolitical economy of health is illustrated with examples from recent research, including a critical assessment of health inequalities during the Covid-19 pandemic.

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Published

2021-06-30

How to Cite

Santiago dived. (2021). The crucial aspects of the (macro) political economy of health. OEconomia, 4(1). Retrieved from https://oeconomiajournal.com/index.php/Journal/article/view/18

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Articles