Health, Wellbeing, and Democratic Citizenship: A Review and Research Agenda

C. Anderson, Sara Hagemann, Robert Klemmensen
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Abstract

Social scientists have examined the causes and consequences of people’s engagement with politics for many decades, yet we have only just begun to understand the roles that health and wellbeing play in people’s involvement as members of the body politic. Findings from a nascent body of research suggest that health predicts people’s decision to turn out to vote and whether they feel they can have a say in political decisions more broadly, but we still lack a systematic understanding of the variable, as well as specific, ways in which health and feelings of wellbeing shape people’s interactions with political life. We also know little about how—and if—these patterns vary across groups in society, regions, countries, or over time. In this contribution, we present a framework for analysing the ways in which specific health conditions may shape the connection between citizens’ wellbeing and their interactions with politics and how research should endeavour to trace the consequences of these links for people’s lives as citizens and their full participation in the democratic political process.
健康、福祉与民主公民:回顾与研究议程
几十年来,社会科学家一直在研究人们参与政治的原因和后果,但我们才刚刚开始了解健康和幸福在人们作为政治体成员参与政治中所扮演的角色。新兴研究机构的研究结果表明,健康状况可以预测人们投票的决定,以及他们是否觉得自己在更广泛的政治决策中有发言权,但我们仍然缺乏对健康和幸福感如何影响人们与政治生活互动的变量和具体方式的系统理解。我们对这些模式如何以及是否在社会、地区、国家或不同时期的群体中发生变化也知之甚少。在这篇文章中,我们提出了一个框架,用于分析具体健康状况可能影响公民福祉与其与政治互动之间联系的方式,以及研究应如何努力追踪这些联系对公民生活和他们充分参与民主政治进程的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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