• Ethnicity & disease · Jan 2020

    Building the Transdisciplinary Resistance Collective for Research and Policy: Implications for Dismantling Structural Racism as a Determinant of Health Inequity.

    • Transdisciplinary Resistance Collective for Research and Policy, Adrian N Neely, Asia S Ivey, Catherine Duarte, Jocelyn Poe, and Sireen Irsheid.
    • Georgia State University, Teaching and Teacher Education, Atlanta, GA.
    • Ethn Dis. 2020 Jan 1; 30 (3): 381-388.

    AbstractStructural racism is a multilevel system of ideologies, institutions, and processes that have created and reified racial/ethnic inequities. As a system, it works in concert across institutions to propagate racial injustice. Thus, efforts to address structural racism and its implications for health inequity require transdisciplinary collaboration. In this article, we begin by describing the process through which we have leveraged our discipline-specific training -- spanning education, epidemiology, social work, sociology, and urban planning -- to co-construct a transdisciplinary analysis of the determinants of racial health inequity. Specifically, we introduce the underlying theories that guide our framework development and demonstrate the application of our integrated framework through a case example. We conclude with potential research and policy implications.Copyright © 2020, Ethnicity & Disease, Inc.

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