Resources

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

 

Members of Healthy people, healthy communities, healthy societies: critical approaches to health and well-being have published widely. Here is a selection of these publications –

Baker, T., Evans, J. and Hennigan, B. (forthcoming) Investable poverty: Social investment states and the geographies of poverty management. Progress in Human Geography. Online first: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0309132519849288

 

Baker, T., McCann, E. and Temenos, T. (forthcoming) Into the ordinary: Non-elite actors and the mobility of harm reduction policies. Policy & Society. Online first: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14494035.2019.1626079?af=R&

 

Baker, T. and McCann, E. (forthcoming) Beyond failure: The generative effects of unsuccessful proposals for Supervised Drug Consumption Spaces in Melbourne, Australia. Urban Geography. Online first: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02723638.2018.1500254

 

Battles, H. T. (2019). In the shadow of war: The forgotten 1916 polio epidemic in New Zealand.  In: Bioarchaeology of Marginalized People. Editors M. Mant and A. Holland. Elsevier Academic Press, pp. 181-203.

 

Battles, H. T., & Jones, B.-L. (2018). The social geography of diphtheria mortality in Hamilton. Ontario History, 110 (1), 88-107. 10.7202/1044327ar

 

Battles, H. T. (2017). Differences in polio mortality by socioeconomic status in two southern Ontario counties, 1900–1937. Social Science History, 41 (2), 305-332. 10.1017/ssh.2017.1

 

Bell, S., Foley, R., Leyshon, C., and Kearns, R. (2019). The ‘healthy dose’ of nature: a cautionary tale. Geography Compass 13 :e12415.

Bryder, L. Mobilising Mothers: The 1917 National Baby Week’, Medical History, 2019 Jan; 63(1): 2–23; doi: 10.1017/mdh.2018.60

 

Bryder, L. Challenging New Zealand’s Icon, Sir Frederic Truby King, Social History of Medicine, 2018, hky051, https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hky051

 

Bryder, L. Medical History in Australia and New Zealand. Mark Jackson (ed), A Global History of Medicine, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 220-242, 2018.

 

Dobson, R., Herbst, P., Candy, S., Brott, T., Garrett, J., Humphrey, G., Reeve, J., Tawhai, M., Taylor, D., Warren, J., and Whittaker, R. (forthcoming/in press). Understanding end-user perspectives of mobile pulmonary rehabilitation (mPR): Results from a cross-sectional survey and interviews. JMIR Formative Research. DOI: 10.2196/15466. https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/15466

 

Grayman, J. H. (2017). “Topography and Scale in a Community-Driven Maternal and Child Health Program in Eastern Indonesia.” Medicine Anthropology Theory 4, no. 1: 46–78.

 

Grayman, J. H. (2014). “Rapid Response: Email, Immediacy, and Medical Humanitarianism in Aceh, Indonesia.” Social Science & Medicine 120: 334–43.

 

Grayman, J. H., Good, M.D. and BJ. Good. (2009). “Conflict Nightmares and Trauma in Aceh.” Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry 33, no. 2 (2009): 290–312.

Greaves, L. M., Sibley, C. G., Fraser, G., & Barlow, F. K. (2019). Comparing pansexual-and bisexual-identified participants on demographics, psychological well-being, and political ideology in a New Zealand National Sample. The Journal of Sex Research, 1-8.

 

Greaves, L. M., Barlow, F. K., Huang, Y., Stronge, S., Fraser, G. E., & Sibley, C. G. (2017). Asexual identity in a New Zealand national sample: Demographics, wellbeing, and health. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 46(8), 2417-2427.

 

Greaves, L. M., Manuela, S., Muriwai, E., Cowie, L. J., Lindsay, C., … & Sibley, C. G. (2017). The multidimensional model of Māori identity and cultural engagement: Measurement equivalence across diverse Māori groups. New Zealand Journal of Psychology, 46(1), 24-35.

 

Herbst, P. (2016). Action Stations: Biological Cosmopolitanism at Play on Online Support Groups for Genetic Disorders. SITES Special Issue. Peripheral Cosmopolitanisms: New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific. 13(1): 177-197. University of Otago, NZ.

 

Kearns, R.  & Coleman, T. (2018). Ageing landscapes: Real and imagined. In Skinner, M.W., Andrews, G.J., and Cutchin, M.P. (Eds).  Geographical Gerontology: Concepts and Approaches (281-292). London: Routledge.

 

Lay-Yee, R., Milne, B.J., Shackleton, N., Chang, K., Davis, P. (2018).  ‘Preventing youth depression: Simulating the impact of parenting interventions’. Advances in Life Course Research, 37, 15-22.

 

Lee, R. & North, N. (2013). Barriers to Maori sole mothers primary health care access. Journal of Primary Health Care, 5(4), 315-321.

http://www.publish.csiro.au.ezproxy.auckland.ac.nz/HC/pdf/HC13315

 

Milne, B.J., Atkinson, J., Blakely, T., Day, H., Douwes, J., Gibb, S., Nicholson, M., Shackleton, N., Sporle, A, Teng, A. (2019). Data Resource Profile: The New Zealand Integrated Data Infrastructure (IDI). International Journal of Epidemiology, doi: 10.1093/ije/dyz014

 

Milne, B.J., Lay-Yee, R., McLay, J., Pearson, J., von Randow, M., Davis, P. (2015).  Modelling the Early Life-Course (MELC): a Microsimulation Model of Child Development in New Zealand. International Journal of Micro-simulation, 8. (2). , 28-60.

 

Moon, G., and Kearns, R.  (2019). Health geography in New Zealand and Australia: Global integration or Antipodean exceptionalism? Geographical Research 57 (1) 8-23.

 

Parr, J. “Act Thin, Stay Thin: Commercialization, Behavior Modification and Group Weight Control,” Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, in press, Summer 2019.

 

Parr, J. “Feeding Your Feelings: Emotional Eating in 1950s American Popular Culture.” In C. Farkas ed. Something. Nothing. Everything: Reading the Psychosomatic in Medical and Popular Culture (New York: Routledge, 2017).

 

Parr, J. “Obesity and the Emergence of Mutual-Aid Groups for Weight Loss in the Postwar United States,” Social History of Medicine 27, no. 4 (2014): 768-788.

 

Shackleton, N., Derraik, J. G. B., Audas, R., Taylor, R. W., Glover, M., Morton, S. M. B., . . . Milne, B. J. (2019). Decomposing ethnic differences in body mass index and obesity rates among New Zealand pre-schoolers. International Journal of Obesity. doi:10.1038/s41366-019-0390-4

 

Shackleton, N., Allen, E., Bevilacqua, L., Viner, R., & Bonell, C. (2018). Associations between socio-economic status (including school- and pupil-level interactions) and student perceptions of school environment and health in English secondary schools. British Educational Research Journal. doi:10.1002/berj.3455

 

Shackleton, N., Broadbent, J. M., Thornley, S., Milne, B. J., Crengle, S., & Exeter, D. J. (2018). Inequalities in dental caries experience among 4-year-old New Zealand children.. Community dentistry and oral epidemiology46(3), 288-296. doi:10.1111/cdoe.12364

 

Spray, J., Floyd, B., Littleton, J., Trnka, S., & Mattison, S. (2018). Social group dynamics predict stress variability among children in a New Zealand classroom. Homo-Journal of Comparative Human Biology, 69 (1-2), 50-61. 10.1016/j.jchb.2013.03.005 

 

Tiatia-Seath, J., Lay-Yee, R., & von Randow, M. (2019). Supporting the bereavement needs of Pacific communities in New Zealand following a suicide: A survey of service providers. Suicidology Online, 10, 1-8.  

 

Tiatia-Seath, J., Underhill-Sem, Y., & Woodward, A. (2018). The nexus between climate change, mental health and wellbeing and Pacific peoples. Pacific Health Dialog, 21 (2), 47-49. 10.26635/phd.2018.911
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2292/45867

 

Trnka, S.H. (2017). One Blue Child: Asthma, Responsibility and the Politics of Global Health. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press. 

 

Trnka, S.H. and C.J. Trundle, eds. (2017). Competing Responsibilities: The Ethics and Politics of Contemporary Life. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. ​

 

Trnka, S.H. and A.M. Ortiz. (2017). “Reshaping the Landscape of Care: Health Apps and the Ethics of Self-responsibility and Care for the Other.” Sites: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies. 14(2): 103-122. http://dx.doi.org/10.11157/sites-vol14iss2id376

 

Trnka, S.H. (2016). “Digital Care: Agency and Temporality in Young People’s Use of Health Apps.” Engaging Science, Technology, and Society. 2:248-265.

 

Vallée, M. (2013). ‘Perpetuating a Reductionist Medical Worldview: The Absence of Environmental Medicine in the American ADHD Clinical Practice Guidelines.’ In Ecological Health, ed. M. Gislason, vol. 15 of Advances in Medical Sociology, series editor Barbara Katz Rothman. Dallas, TX: Emerald Press.

 

Ware, C. (2019). HIV Survivors in Sydney. Memories of the Epidemic. Palgrave Macmillan. Pages: 247.

 

Ware, C. (2018). ‘Things You Can’t Talk About’: Engaging with HIV-Positive Gay Men’s Survivor Narratives, Oral History 46. 2: 33-40.

 

Ware, C. (2017). “Time to Speak Out”: The 1980s Australian Gay Press and Personal Accounts of Living with HIV, Journal of Australian Studies 41. 4 (2017), 472-486.