Committee on Health Politics
A Related Organization
 of the American Political Science Association


This page:

Welcome
Main menu
History 
Webmasters



Announcements:

Deadline for proposing a paper for the 2004 APSA meetings will probably be  December 1, 2002 -- Send proposals to Prof. Jim Brasfield (see email and snailmail addresses below).



 

 
 
 
 
 

Welcome

Welcome to the Committee on Health Politics home page. We are a group of social scientists with a strong professional interest in health policy issues. We are a "related organization" of the American Political Science Association and sponsor three or four panels each year at the APSA Annual Meeting. Membership is free, and anyone with an interest in health policy is invited to be a member . There are currently about two hundred people on the mailing list. About fifty people annually attend the lunch business meeting of the COHP. 

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2003 American Political Science Association Meetings


Panel 1: Inequality and Health Care
Date: Friday, Aug 29, 4:15 PM
 
Chair: James A. Morone, james_morone@brown.edu, Brown University

Papers:
Why Are Race Disparities so Intractable?
Deborah Stone, casey@sugar-river.net, Dartmouth College

Little Victories: Politics, Inequality and Kids
James A. Morone, james_morone@brown.edu, Brown University

Medicaid at the Crossroads
Colleen M. Grogan, cgrogan@uchicago.edu, University of Chicago
Eric M. Patashnik, ericpat@virginia.edu, University of Virginia

The Politics of Redistribution (From the Bottom to the Top): The Bush Tax Cut of 2001 in Comparative and Historical Perspective
Jacob S. Hacker, jacob.hacker@yale.edu, Yale University
 
Discussant(s):
Lawrence D. Brown, lbrownocl@aol.com, Columbia University
Theodore R. Marmor, theodore.marmor@yale.edu, Yale University



Panel 2: The Politics of Tobacco Control: Comparative Perspectives

Date: Friday, Aug 29, 10:00 AM
 
Chair: Pauline Vaillancourt Rosenau, prosenau@sph.uth.tmc.edu, University of Texas, Houston

Papers:
Tobacco Control in Comparative Perspective: Framing the Problems and the Puzzles
Theodore R. Marmor, theodore.marmor@yale.edu, Yale University

The Comparative Politics of Tobacco Control
Donley T. Studlar, dstudlar@wvu.edu, West Virginia University

Germany's Non-war Against Smoking and the Tobacco Policy of the European Union
Alice Holmes Cooper, acooper@olemiss.edu, University of Mississippi
Paulette Kurzer, kurzer@arizona.edu, University of Arizona

Updating Up in Smoke
Martha Derthick, mad2d@Virginia.EDU, University of Virginia

Discussant(s):
Pauline Vaillancourt Rosenau, prosenau@sph.uth.tmc.edu, University of Texas, Houston
Harold L. Wilensky, hwilensk@socrates.berkeley.edu, University of California at Berkeley



Business meeting:  Saturday, August 30th, 12:20 p.m. at Moriarty's Restaurant, 1116 Walnut St.


2002 APSA Panels
Panel 1 -- Saturday, August 31, 10:45 a.m.  Topic:  Medicare in Crisis: Radical or Incremental Reform?  A Discussion of "False Alarm, Why the Greatest Threat to Social Security and Medicare is the Campaign to 'Save' Them" by Joseph White*
Panel 2 -- Friday August 30, 10:45 a.m.Topic:  Roundtable on Bioterrorism and the Public Health Response.  
Link to the 2002 American Political Science Association Annual Meeting Program



History of the Committee

The origins of the Committee on Health Politics (COHP) can be traced back to the late 1960s. In 1969 a conference was held at the Harvard School of Public Health. The focus of the conference was the neglect of health care issues in the political science community, especially in the light of recent works on the subject by economists. Included in the group were Ralph Straetz, Ted Marmor, and Mathew Holden. Ralph Straetz at New York University had a federal mental health grant that trained political scientists. Harvard and some other schools of public health also had post-doctoral fellowships that helped to support political scientists who were pursuing research on health policy issues. 

In the early 1970s Straetz circulated a newsletter, and he began to sponsor a breakfast meeting of the group at the American Political Science Association (APSA). Members also sometimes met at the American Public Health Association Annual Meeting. These activities helped to mold a community of political scientists who became important figures in the health policy research community of the late 1970s and 1980s. 

By 1975 members of the COHP decided that a journal devoted to the publication of articles on health policy would stimulate other social scientists to conduct research and write in the field.. This led to the formation of the Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law, which published its first issue in 1976. 

The COHP has continued to meet each year at the APSA. It is an unaffiliated group of the APSA, and currently sponsors three or four panels each year at the APSA Annual Meeting. Membership is free, and anyone with an interest in health policy is invited to be a member. There are currently about two hundred people on the mailing list. About fifty people annually attend the lunch business meeting of the COHP. 

Webmasters: 

  • Jim Brasfield, Department of Political Science, Webster University, 470 E. Lockwood, St. Louis, Missouri 63119 brasfijm@websteruniv.edu and
  • Ted Anagnoson, Department of Political Science, California State University, Los Angeles, CA 90032-8226 anag999@silcom.com


This page created by Jim Brasfield and J. T. Anagnoson.  Last update: 8/5/2003


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