The University of Southampton
ECS EdShare Home

Browse by Tags: decision making

Number of items: 2.

[thumbnail of gcu-a0a2g7-a.wav] [thumbnail of 512Audio.html]
GCPH Seminar Series 2: Where's the Evidence - The Contribution of Lay Knowledge to Reducing Health Inequalities
This lecture presented the case for lay knowledge and theories to be taken more seriously. Professor Popay argued that lay knowledge is sophisticated, helps to answer questions about meaning and experience, and should be treated as an equal but different voice in informing decision-making about policy and practice.

Shared with the World by EPrints Services

[thumbnail of gcu-a0a4q7-a.wav] [thumbnail of 496Audio.html]
GCPH Seminar Series 3: Belonging to One Another - Principles and Practices for Engaging the Other
In a city which prides itself on friendliness and yet has inequalities in health which persist despite our best attempts to tackle them, questions about our relationships to others are of key significance.This issue of otherness is ancient and contemporary, local as well as global, and of significance both in everyday life and periods of cultural crisis. In this lecture, Aftab Omer will consider how to develop core principles and practices that are responsive to the challenges of otherness both within the city and beyond. The diversity we see in the human race is often treated as a problem rather than an asset. For example, we see this in various forms of social oppression such as inequality, racism and cultural trauma. Omer argues that responding effectively to the fragmentation that characterises this global cultural crisis, calls for leadership that practices a profound engagement with all that is other. Such a perspective will raise important insights and questions about how people, organisations and cultures relate to each other, with important consequences for the pursuit of wellbeing.

Shared with the World by EPrints Services

This list was generated on Sun Dec 29 16:53:54 2024 GMT.
Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

ECS EdShare supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of https://edshare.ecs.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×