Abstract
Successful public health interventions have, in recent decades, improved the health of the working classes in significant ways across much of the western world. Nevertheless, here, I argue that populist electoral breakthroughs over the last decade may be considered side-effects of ‘successful’ public health policies: crucially, the claim is that those political side-effects resulted because of—rather than despite—the health-measured success of those public health interventions.
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APA
Di Nucci, E. (2023). The public health theory of populism. Bioethics, 37(8), 748–755. https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.13207
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