Nathanson C A
Johns Hopkins University, USA.
J Health Polit Policy Law. 1999 Jun;24(3):421-88. doi: 10.1215/03616878-24-3-421.
Social movements organized around perceived threats to health play an important role in American life as advocates for change in health policies and health behaviors. This article employs a framework drawn from social movement and related sociological theories to compare two such movements: the smoking/tobacco control movement and the gun control movement. A major purpose of the article is to identify specific social movement ideologies and actions that are more or less likely to facilitate achievement of the movement's health policy objectives. The article concludes that the success of health-related social movements is associated with (1) the articulation of a socially (as well as scientifically) credible threat to the public's health, (2) the ability to mobilize a diverse organizational constituency, and (3) the convergence of political opportunities with target vulnerabilities.
围绕人们所察觉到的健康威胁而组织起来的社会运动,在美国生活中扮演着重要角色,它们是推动健康政策和健康行为变革的倡导者。本文运用了源自社会运动及相关社会学理论的框架,来比较两个这样的运动:吸烟/烟草控制运动和枪支管制运动。本文的一个主要目的是确定哪些特定的社会运动意识形态和行动或多或少有助于实现该运动的健康政策目标。文章得出结论,与健康相关的社会运动的成功与以下几点相关:(1)明确阐述对公众健康在社会层面(以及科学层面)可信的威胁;(2)动员不同组织选民群体的能力;(3)政治机会与目标脆弱性的契合。