Masculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?

Construction remains a male-dominated industry and men in construction suffer high rates of illness and injury compared to other industries. Consideration of men and masculinities may support any attempt to maintain and promote the health and wellbeing of construction workers. This article discusses...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hanna, E, Gough, B, Markham, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020
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author Hanna, E
Gough, B
Markham, S
author_facet Hanna, E
Gough, B
Markham, S
author_sort Hanna, E
collection OXFORD
description Construction remains a male-dominated industry and men in construction suffer high rates of illness and injury compared to other industries. Consideration of men and masculinities may support any attempt to maintain and promote the health and wellbeing of construction workers. This article discusses qualitative case study research conducted with stakeholders in the UK construction industry around health and wellbeing. Our thematic analysis highlights how masculinities operate to both inhibit and promote healthy practices. On the one hand, a culture of stoicism pertaining to illness or injury was evident, whilst a competitive ethos between occupational groups was observed to increase risk-taking and poor health choices. However, interviewees identified homosocial camaraderie and respect for lived experience as a means to promote positive health behaviour. Differences between younger and older generations of employees were noted. Overall, we argue that men's work and associated health practices can be understood as ‘rational’ individualized responses to structural deregulation and insecurity within the construction industry.
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spelling oxford-uuid:b83cbca5-ef20-4b5e-9952-1f29bc55b6182023-01-11T07:01:33ZMasculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b83cbca5-ef20-4b5e-9952-1f29bc55b618EnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2020Hanna, EGough, BMarkham, SConstruction remains a male-dominated industry and men in construction suffer high rates of illness and injury compared to other industries. Consideration of men and masculinities may support any attempt to maintain and promote the health and wellbeing of construction workers. This article discusses qualitative case study research conducted with stakeholders in the UK construction industry around health and wellbeing. Our thematic analysis highlights how masculinities operate to both inhibit and promote healthy practices. On the one hand, a culture of stoicism pertaining to illness or injury was evident, whilst a competitive ethos between occupational groups was observed to increase risk-taking and poor health choices. However, interviewees identified homosocial camaraderie and respect for lived experience as a means to promote positive health behaviour. Differences between younger and older generations of employees were noted. Overall, we argue that men's work and associated health practices can be understood as ‘rational’ individualized responses to structural deregulation and insecurity within the construction industry.
spellingShingle Hanna, E
Gough, B
Markham, S
Masculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?
title Masculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?
title_full Masculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?
title_fullStr Masculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?
title_full_unstemmed Masculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?
title_short Masculinities in the construction industry: A double-edged sword for health and wellbeing?
title_sort masculinities in the construction industry a double edged sword for health and wellbeing
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AT goughb masculinitiesintheconstructionindustryadoubleedgedswordforhealthandwellbeing
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