Health Promotion, a core subject in the study of public health, is community-focused action to address health inequity. POPLHTLH 733 exposes students to contemporary and interdisciplinary theories used in health promotion to understand the drivers and determinants of inequality and approaches that best redress them, highlighting, in particular, the influence of socio-demographic characteristics such as income, gender, ethnicity, age, etc. in generating marginalisation. While the central focus in health promotion is empowering action at the level of community, its scope extends from organisational units such as schools and workplaces to the macro concerns of policy and politics.
The course is most appropriate for those who are already in or who intend working in the health promotion workforce as well as for students wishing to undertake research in areas related to critical analysis of public health concerns.
The course is offered over 5 full-day sessions, each devoted to specific theoretical focus. In the tradition of post-graduate courses, the class is a mix of lecture, class activities and discussions, and high levels of interaction are expected. Students intending to take POPLHLTH 733 must be prepared to keep up with prescribed readings, attend lectures and tutorials, participate in class discussions, be prepared to engage intellectually in wider current affairs on subjects of relevance to the class, and complete all graded assessments and ungraded tasks and activities.