November 29, 2020 | Working Paper
  • Headline: Deindustrialization and ‘Deaths of Despair’
  • Intro Text: A large literature on deaths of despair argues that workers’ declining life expectancy in deindustrialized rustbelt areas in the U.S. reflects a deep crisis of capitalism. But many researchers focus on the unhealthy lifestyle of workers as opposed to the destructive forces of deindustrialization itself. PERI researcher Lawrence King and co-authors Gabor Scheiring and David Stuckler analyze the role of deindustrialization in the deaths of despair epidemic that hit Eastern Europe in the 1990s, presenting 82 semi-structured interviews in four deindustrialized towns in Hungary. These interviews enable King and co-authors to develop a general framework for understanding deaths of despair.
  • Type of publication: Working Paper
  • Research or In The Media: Research
  • Research Area: Finance, Jobs & Macroeconomics
  • Publication Date: 2020-11-29
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  • Authors:
    • Add Authors: Gabor Scheiring
    • Add Authors: David Stuckler
    • Add Authors: Lawrence King
  • Show in Front Page Modules: No
Deindustrialization and Deaths of Despair: Mapping the Impact of Industrial Decline on Ill Health

This working paper was published in the Journal of Theory and Society

Abstract

A growing literature on deaths of despair has argued that workers’ declining life expectancy in deindustrialized rustbelt areas in the U.S. and the associated deepening of health inequalities signal the profound existential crisis of contemporary capitalism. Competing explanations downplay the negative consequences of “creative destruction” and focus instead on unhealthy lifestyles. This article contributes to this debate by presenting the first empirical analysis of the role of deindustrialization in the deaths of despair epidemic that hit Eastern Europe in the 1990s. Drawing on the thematic analysis of 82 semi-structured interviews in four deindustrialized towns in Hungary, the article constructs a general sociological framework for analyzing deaths of despair applicable to other rustbelt areas. Deindustrialization engenders individual and social processes that affect health by increasing stress and eroding coping resources. By conceptualizing deindustrialization as a fundamental cause of ill health, sociology has great potential to contribute to understanding the root causes of deaths of despair.

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