ABSTRACT
This international collection explores the relationships between society, place, gender and health, and how these play out in different parts of the world. The chapters work together in examining the complex layering of social, economic and political relations that frame women's health. The authors demonstrate that women's health needs to be understood 'in place' if gains are to be made in improving women's health and health care.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |1 pages
PART I Globalization, structural change, and political realignment: implications for women’s health
part |1 pages
PART II Providing and gaining access to health care: local areas and networks
part |1 pages
PART III Embodied health and illness, perceptions, and place