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Recalibrating Stigma

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Available open access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. Stigma has long been a central concern for social scientists studying health and illness. Yet, in existing work, stigma often escapes defi...
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  • 15 July 2025
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Available open access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.

Stigma has long been a central concern for social scientists studying health and illness. Yet, in existing work, stigma often escapes definition and clarification, is treated as universal and constant, and becomes a vague catch-all term for a range of conditions and situations.

This book initiates a process of recalibrating the conceptualisation of stigma. The book features original analyses from early- and mid-career scholars focusing on diverse issues, including mental health, racism, sex, HIV, reproduction, obesity, eating disorders, self-harm, exercise, drug use, COVID-19, and disability.

This ambitious book offers new perspectives to stimulate and intensify conversations around stigma, and highlights the valuable contributions of sociological approaches to understanding health and illness.

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Price: $41.95
Pages: 236
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Publication Date: 15 July 2025
ISBN: 9781529235821
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Disease & Health Issues, Medical sociology, HEALTH & FITNESS / Health Care Issues, HEALTH & FITNESS / Diseases & Conditions / AIDS & HIV, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Poverty & Homelessness, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Race & Ethnic Relations, Health, Relationships and Personal development, Sociology, Care of people with mental health conditions, Mental health services
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“A very impressive and original body of work. This collection is a state-of-the-art contribution to the sociology of stigma and to the ways in which it is now to be theorised and retheorised. Admirably edited, it covers multiple facets of stigma and stigmatisation in novel, subtle and illuminating ways. It will become a much-cited text within the sociology of health and illness, and further afield too.” Graham Scambler Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University College London, and Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences

Gareth M. Thomas is Reader in the School of Social Sciences at Cardiff University.

Oli Williams is Lecturer in Co-designing Healthcare Interventions at King’s College London.

Tanisha Spratt is Senior Lecturer in Racism and Health at King’s College London.

Amy Chandler is Professor of the Sociology of Health and Illness at the University of Edinburgh.

Introduction: Recalibrating Stigma - Gareth M. Thomas, Oli Williams, Tanisha Spratt, and Amy Chandler

1. Stigma, Racism, and Mental Healthcare - Dharmi Kapadia and Maria Haarmans

2. Stigma and Sexual Arousal: Rethinking HIV-Related Stigma in the Age of PrEP and the Internet - Jaime García-Iglesias

3. The Contested Nature of Abortion Stigma: From the Individual to the Structural - Gillian Love

4. Shooting Blanks?: Exploring the Assumed Relationship Between Masculinity and Stigma in Male Fertility - Esmée Hanna, Caroline Law, and Nicky Hudson

5. On the Process of Becoming a Body Fascist: Stigma and Shame in the Moral Economy of Exercise - Kass Gibson

6. Recalibrating Anti-Stigma: Avoiding Binary Thinking and ‘Destigmatisation Drift’ in Public Health - Oli Williams, Amy Chandler, Gareth M. Thomas, and Tanisha Spratt

7. Readdressing Addiction Stigma: Making Space for Being in the World Differently - Fay Dennis

8. How Stigma Emerges and Mutates: The Case of Long COVID Stigma - Hannah Farrimond and Mike Michael

9. Notes on a Spoiled Working Identity: Stigma, Illness, and Disability in the Contemporary (Western) Workplace - Jennifer Remnant

10. Spoiled Identity and the Curated Self: Narrativising Stigma in Parents’ Memoirs of Raising Disabled Children - Harriet Cooper

11. Studying Up: Understanding Power in Stigmatisation, Discrimination, and Health - Andy Guise, Simone Helleren, and River Újhadbor

Recalibrating Stigma: Concluding Thoughts - Tanisha Spratt, Amy Chandler, Oli Williams, and Gareth M. Thomas