4.2 Article

Dangerous liaisons? Applying the social harm perspective to the social inequality, housing and health trifecta during the Covid-19 pandemic

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HOUSING POLICY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 232-259

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/19491247.2021.1971033

Keywords

Social harm; housing policy; health inequality; systematic literature mapping review; Covid-19

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This paper examines the associations between income inequality, housing inequality, and the social gradient in health through a lens of social harm, providing new insights for policy analysis. It also explores the specific harms associated with stay-at-home lockdowns, including intimate partner and domestic violence, poor mental health, and health harming behaviors. The findings highlight the importance of understanding various types of harm that occur within the home and suggest implications for policy analysis and further research in housing studies.
Global rates of excess mortality attributable to the Covid-19 pandemic provide a fresh impetus to make sense of the associations between income inequality, housing inequality and the social gradient in health, suggesting new questions about the ways in which housing and health are treated in the framing and development of public policy. The first half of the paper uses a social harm lens to examine the threefold associations of the social inequality, housing and health trifecta and offers new insights for policy analysis which foregrounds the production, transmission, and experience of various types of harm which occur within the home. The main body of the paper then draws upon the outcomes of an international systematic literature mapping review of 213 Covid-19 research papers to demonstrate three specific harms associated with stay-at-home lockdowns: (i) intimate partner and domestic violence, (ii) poor mental health and (iii) health harming behaviours. The reported findings are interpreted using a social harm perspective and some implications for policy analysis are illustrated. The paper concludes with a reflection on the efficacy of social harm as a lens for policy analysis and suggests directions for further research in housing studies and zemiology.

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