Rosemary Davidson
London School of Economics and Political Science
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rosemary Davidson.
Sociology of Health and Illness | 2003
Rosemary Davidson; Kate Hunt; Jenny Kitzinger
For almost two decades prior to the election of the New Labour government in 1997, inequalities in health were largely absent from the political debate in Britain. New Labour sought to bring inequalities, and the role of poverty as a root cause of ill-health, back on to the public agenda. This paper analyses four key documents (Green and White Papers) laying out their proposals for public health. We explore the shifting emphasis on health inequalities between the four official documents, and between the documents and their associated press release. The paper also analyses how this translated into media coverage. It identifies common themes across the press coverage - such as criticisms about lack of targets - but also shows how coverage varied (e.g. between UK national and Scottish press). Finally, the study highlights the crucial issue of political context and news timing, illustrating how the English White Paper was overshadowed by other health stories which formed the basis for attacks on the Labour government in general and the Health Minister in particular.
Social Policy and Society | 2009
Rosemary Davidson
This paper attempts to contribute to understandings of the role of resilience as a process enabling individuals to steer a positive course in their lives by drawing on longitudinal qualitative data collected from six case study individuals, drawn from a wider study of one hundred families over a seven-year period. It is shown how respondents construct their own life trajectories, specifically reflecting on the changes and challenges they face. Additionally, this work offers a policy perspective to the debate on resilience, examining the interplay between recent government initiatives and their potential role in fostering resilience.
Archive | 2011
Anne Power; Helen Willmot; Rosemary Davidson
Family Futures assesses the extent to which the previous Labour government addressed and reduced social exclusion and the problems associated with it in Britains disadvantaged neighbourhoods, drawing upon the results of a 7 year qualitative longitudinal study.
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2000
Abdoreza Davoodi-Semiromi; George W. Lanyon; Rosemary Davidson; Michael Connor
Blood samples from 47 unselected patients with colorectal cancer were used as a source of hMSH2 mRNA. We identified three new hMSH2 aberrant mRNAs including: 1) IVS15 +5 G-->C resulting in exon 15 skipping from transcript; 2) an mRNA deletion of exons 2 to 6 inclusive; and 3) an mRNA deletion of exons 2 to 8 inclusive. In order to find out whether or not exon skipping is a natural consequence of alternative mRNA splicing, total RNA from 20 healthy individuals was converted to cDNA by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and our results show that none of the healthy individuals have the above aberrant mRNA. Our results also show that the presence of mutations in colorectal cancer cases, which do not fully meet the hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer criteria, would suggest that all familial cases should be investigated for germ line mutations in the mismatch repair genes.
Energy Policy | 2013
Nazmiye Balta-Ozkan; Rosemary Davidson; M. Bicket; Lorraine E. Whitmarsh
Social Science & Medicine | 2006
Rosemary Davidson; Jenny Kitzinger; Kate Hunt
Energy | 2013
Nazmiye Balta-Ozkan; Rosemary Davidson; M. Bicket; Lorraine E. Whitmarsh
Health & Place | 2008
Rosemary Davidson; Richard Mitchell; Kate Hunt
Archive | 2014
Nazmiye Balta-Ozkan; T. Watson; Peter M. Connor; Colin J. Axon; Lorraine E. Whitmarsh; Rosemary Davidson; Alexa Spence; Phil Baker; Dimitrios Xenias; Liana Mirela Cipcigan; Gary Taylor
Archive | 2010
Maria Hudson; Joan Phillips; Kathryn Ray; Sandra Vegeris; Rosemary Davidson