Publications
Chosen filters:
Chosen filters:
Social support as a key factor in digital inequalities: the necessity of including social networks in the inequalities research agenda Ghent University
This presentation draws on the results of a large-scale study on the composition and socio-economic background of social support networks and their moderating role in explaining digital inequalities. This study, issued and funded by a local government, based on van DijkU+2019s multiple access model, acknowledges motivational, material, skills and usage divides, while focusing on the under-researched issue of social support. Drawing upon the ...
Temporal and spatial analysis of social inequalities: An innovative method to grasp social inequalities evolution on the territory KU Leuven
This paper puts forward a methodology to rank the population along a hierarchical continuum, from a lower level to a higher level of social precariousness. Going beyond the complex layered issues related to the concept of poverty, it rather explores the notion of deprivation with the idea of social inequalities which are observable according to specific socio-economic key dimensions. Part of a broader research – Destiny1 – focusing on both the ...
Horizontal Inequalities and Conflict: Education as a Separate Dimension of Horizontal Inequalities KU Leuven
Extended Caffarelli-Kohn-Nirenberg inequalities, and remainders, stability, and superweights for Lp-weighted Hardy inequalities Ghent University
Extended Caffarelli-Kohn-Nirenberg inequalities and superweights for Lp-weighted Hardy inequalities Ghent University
Socioeconomic inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical interventions: do they reflect inequalities in access or quality of health care? Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Background
Previous studies have reported large socioeconomic inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical intervention, but it is unclear whether these can be attributed to inequalities in access or quality of health care, or to confounding influences such as inequalities in background risk of diseases. We therefore studied whether inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical intervention vary ...
Previous studies have reported large socioeconomic inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical intervention, but it is unclear whether these can be attributed to inequalities in access or quality of health care, or to confounding influences such as inequalities in background risk of diseases. We therefore studied whether inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical intervention vary ...