Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective

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Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective. / Hindhede, Anette Lykke; Larsen, Kristian.

In: Social Theory & Health, Vol. 17, 2019, p. 213–230.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hindhede, AL & Larsen, K 2019, 'Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective', Social Theory & Health, vol. 17, pp. 213–230. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41285-018-0074-5

APA

Hindhede, A. L., & Larsen, K. (2019). Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective. Social Theory & Health, 17, 213–230. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41285-018-0074-5

Vancouver

Hindhede AL, Larsen K. Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective. Social Theory & Health. 2019;17:213–230. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41285-018-0074-5

Author

Hindhede, Anette Lykke ; Larsen, Kristian. / Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective. In: Social Theory & Health. 2019 ; Vol. 17. pp. 213–230.

Bibtex

@article{d71ff4c55377463a9c9e6a5fb86000c3,
title = "Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective",
abstract = "Previous research from Norway on the prestige ranking of medical specialities shows that physicians rank specialities as well as diseases according to social prestige. The aim of this study was to theoretically supplement the Goffman-inspired studies by use of a Bourdieuian field perspective. This study{\textquoteright}s relevance is its contribution to a theoretical understanding of stability and change in regard to prestige rankings, as well as social and symbolic acceptance linked to a disease. The paper presents key concepts and offers precision on the theoretical development. Theoretically, the paper suggests that a number of subfields create a complex network that connects and stabilises the field (subfields of institutions, subfields of professions, subfields of diseases, subfields of technology, etc.). Each of them operates with relative autonomy within a broader medical field, and as such they constitute a structural homology. With reference to both Album and Bourdieu, the paper suggests that while a disease can achieve a higher prestige through its association with a new medical technology, its triumphs in the internal struggles with its rivals are limited, since it is still part of a complex network linked with logics from other subfields which regulate its rise and fall in the overall prestige hierarchy. Stability is built (in relations) within medical institutions, medical professions and diseases.",
author = "Hindhede, {Anette Lykke} and Kristian Larsen",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1057/s41285-018-0074-5",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "213–230",
journal = "Social Theory and Health",
issn = "1477-8211",
publisher = "Palgrave Macmillan",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prestige hierarchies of diseases and specialities in a field perspective

AU - Hindhede, Anette Lykke

AU - Larsen, Kristian

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Previous research from Norway on the prestige ranking of medical specialities shows that physicians rank specialities as well as diseases according to social prestige. The aim of this study was to theoretically supplement the Goffman-inspired studies by use of a Bourdieuian field perspective. This study’s relevance is its contribution to a theoretical understanding of stability and change in regard to prestige rankings, as well as social and symbolic acceptance linked to a disease. The paper presents key concepts and offers precision on the theoretical development. Theoretically, the paper suggests that a number of subfields create a complex network that connects and stabilises the field (subfields of institutions, subfields of professions, subfields of diseases, subfields of technology, etc.). Each of them operates with relative autonomy within a broader medical field, and as such they constitute a structural homology. With reference to both Album and Bourdieu, the paper suggests that while a disease can achieve a higher prestige through its association with a new medical technology, its triumphs in the internal struggles with its rivals are limited, since it is still part of a complex network linked with logics from other subfields which regulate its rise and fall in the overall prestige hierarchy. Stability is built (in relations) within medical institutions, medical professions and diseases.

AB - Previous research from Norway on the prestige ranking of medical specialities shows that physicians rank specialities as well as diseases according to social prestige. The aim of this study was to theoretically supplement the Goffman-inspired studies by use of a Bourdieuian field perspective. This study’s relevance is its contribution to a theoretical understanding of stability and change in regard to prestige rankings, as well as social and symbolic acceptance linked to a disease. The paper presents key concepts and offers precision on the theoretical development. Theoretically, the paper suggests that a number of subfields create a complex network that connects and stabilises the field (subfields of institutions, subfields of professions, subfields of diseases, subfields of technology, etc.). Each of them operates with relative autonomy within a broader medical field, and as such they constitute a structural homology. With reference to both Album and Bourdieu, the paper suggests that while a disease can achieve a higher prestige through its association with a new medical technology, its triumphs in the internal struggles with its rivals are limited, since it is still part of a complex network linked with logics from other subfields which regulate its rise and fall in the overall prestige hierarchy. Stability is built (in relations) within medical institutions, medical professions and diseases.

U2 - 10.1057/s41285-018-0074-5

DO - 10.1057/s41285-018-0074-5

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 213

EP - 230

JO - Social Theory and Health

JF - Social Theory and Health

SN - 1477-8211

ER -

ID: 317083494