Bradby, Hannah http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0664-1170
Thapar-Björkert, Suruchi
Hamed, Sarah
Ahlberg, Beth Maina
Funding for this research was provided by:
Vetenskapsrådet (2016-04078)
Article History
Received: 7 February 2019
Accepted: 27 March 2019
First Online: 23 April 2019
Authors’ information
: Hannah Bradby researches migration, racialised diversity and health. She is working on gender-based violence among migrants with colleagues from Turkey, the United Kingdom and Australia. A recent paper, ‘Universalism, diversity and norms: Gratitude, healthcare and welfare chauvinism’ has just appeared in the journal <i>Critical Public Health</i>.Suruchi Thapar-Björkert is a historical sociologist and researches gendered discourses of colonialism and nationalism, gendered violence in India and Europe, ethnicity, social capital and social exclusion and feminist qualitative research methodologies.Sarah Hamed is a dentist who graduated from the University of Malmö in Sweden and has a Master’s in international health from the Department of Women’s and Children’s Health at the University of Uppsala in Sweden. She is currently engaged with a doctoral research project on discrimination in the healthcare system in Sweden.Beth Maina Ahlberg is professor of international health and coordinates research at the Skaraborg Institute for Research and Development in Skövde, Sweden. She has worked extensively in eastern and southern Africa and in Sweden on issues of health, gender and community mobilisation for health development.
: Approval granted from the Uppsala Regional Ethics Committee, Diarienummer: 2018/201, project number 2016–04078.
: Citations from qualitative interviews included in this protocol were obtained as part of a previous study (Phillimore et al. Understanding healthcare practices in superdiverse neighbourhoods and developing the concept of welfare bricolage: protocol of a cross-national mixed-methods study, <i>BMC International Health and Human Rights</i> 2015, 15:16).Each participant signed a consent form for their interview material to be used in confidential form. Submitting these signed consent forms would reveal interviewees’ identities and contravene the undertaking to treat material confidentially.
: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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