Person: Hall, Peter
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Hall
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Peter
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Hall, Peter
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Publication A Capabilities Approach to Successful Societies(Council for European Studies, 2010) Hall, PeterPublication Varieties of Capitalism and the Euro Crisis(Informa UK Limited, 2014) Hall, PeterThis article examines the role played by varieties of capitalism in the euro crisis, considering the origins of the crisis, its progression, and the response to it. Deficiencies in the institutional arrangements governing the single currency are linked to economic doctrines of the 1990s. The roots of the crisis are linked to institutional asymmetries between political economies. Northern European economies equipped to operate export-led growth models suitable for success within a monetary union are joined to southern economies whose demand-led growth models were difficult to operate successfully without the capacity to devalue. The response to a tripartite crisis of confidence, debt, and growth is explained in terms of the interaction of institutions, interests, and ideas, and its importance for the future of European integration is explored.Publication The Political Sources of Social Solidarity(Oxford University Press, 2017) Hall, PeterPublication The Changing Role of the State in Liberal Market Economies(Oxford University Press, 2015) Hall, PeterPublication A capabilities approach to population health and public policy-making(Elsevier BV, 2013) Hall, Peter; Taylor, R.C.R.; Barnes, L.Background. – The objective of this study is to outline a capabilities approach to the social determinants of population health and to compare its explanatory power and implications for public policy-making with psychosocial approaches. Methods. – A model linking the structures of economic and social relations to health outcomes is developed and logistic methods used to confirm its base validity for a representative sample of 16,488 citizens in 19 developed democracies drawn from the World Values Surveys of 1990 and 2005. Self-reported health is the dependent variable. Age, gender, education, employment status, self-mastery, income, autonomy at work, ties to family and friends, subjective social status, associational memberships and sense of national belonging are considered. † Results. – At baseline, risk ratios reflecting movement from the 25th to 75th percentile in the distribution of the variable indicate that increases in income reduce the likelihood of poor health (0.78; 0.73-0.82) as does higher autonomy at work (0.90; 0.85-0.94) but so does access to social resources reflected in ties to family and friends (0.89; 0.86-0.92), associational memberships (0.93; 0.89-0.98), subjective social status (0.77; 0.54-0.90) while the absence of feelings of national belonging increases the likelihood of poor health (1.14; 1.06-1.23). Conclusion – The results suggest that population health is dependent on the distribution of social as well as economic resources along the dimensions predicted by a capabilities model. Governments should be attentive to the impact of policy on the distribution of social, as well as economic, resources.Publication Introduction: Social Resilience in the Neoliberal Era(Cambridge University Press, 2013) Hall, PeterPublication Neoliberalism and Social Resilience in the Developed Democracies(Cambridge University Press, 2013) Barnes, Lucy; Hall, PeterPublication The Political Origins of Our Economic Discontents: Contemporary Adjustment Problems in Historical Perspective(Cornell University Press, 2013) Hall, PeterPublication Historical Institutionalism in Rationalist and Sociological Perspective(Cambridge University Press, 2010) Hall, PeterPublication The Current Economic Crisis and the Welfare State(Bremen Zentrum für Sozialpolitik, Universität Bremen, 2010) Hall, Peter