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Risk and identity formation

How health risks prevention shapes collective identities: a micro-sociological approach

, &
Pages 420-438 | Received 24 Jun 2014, Accepted 15 Sep 2015, Published online: 07 Dec 2015
 

Abstract

Sociological theories of health risks in late modernity emphasise the individualisation and increasing anxiety that results from prevention policies, while bio-sociality theories point to the creation of new, biologically or medically based social identities. In this article, we outline an alternative approach. We use micro-sociological interaction ritual theory to examine how health risk prevention technology shape interactions that generate collective identities. Drawing on fieldwork in two Dutch villages in 2008–2009 and again in 2014 that created interview, survey and observational data, we show that automatic external defibrillators turned into symbols of collective identity that elicited feelings of group membership, reflected moral values and filled community members with pride. We demonstrate that this collective identity formation process was shaped by the institutional and technological network of the automatic external defibrillators. In the concluding section of the article, we explore the conditions under which health-related collective identities might develop, particularly with regard to the institutions that create health policies and foster health risk awareness.

ORCID

Don Weenink http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7681-1403

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Science Shop Wageningen University and Research [261 2009].

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