Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences, United Kingdom
Sara Arber spends much of her time researching Gerontology, Public health, Socioeconomic status, Housing tenure and Demography. Her Gerontology research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Nursing, Sleep in non-human animals and Spouse. The various areas that Sara Arber examines in her Public health study include Marital status, Prejudice, Family medicine and Race.
Her study in Socioeconomic status is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Young adult, Disadvantaged and Unemployment. Sara Arber focuses mostly in the field of Unemployment, narrowing it down to matters related to Social inequality and, in some cases, Social psychology. Her work deals with themes such as Household income, Welfare state and Social position, which intersect with Demography.
Her primary areas of study are Gerontology, Sleep in non-human animals, Developmental psychology, Labour economics and Demographic economics. Her studies deal with areas such as Socioeconomic status, Life course approach and Public health as well as Gerontology. Sara Arber has included themes like Housing tenure and Demography in her Public health study.
Her Demography study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Marital status and Ethnic group. Her study looks at the relationship between Sleep in non-human animals and topics such as Social psychology, which overlap with Negotiation and Disadvantaged. Sara Arber conducts interdisciplinary study in the fields of Demographic economics and Household survey through her works.
Sara Arber focuses on Sleep in non-human animals, Gerontology, Developmental psychology, Psychiatry and Gender studies. Her Sleep in non-human animals study incorporates themes from Consciousness, Disadvantaged, Life course approach and Marital status. Her research in Marital status tackles topics such as Clinical psychology which are related to areas like Quality.
Her biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Compromise, Vitamin D and neurology and Quality of life. Her Developmental psychology study combines topics in areas such as Physical body, Resistance and End-stage kidney disease. Her work on Human sexuality is typically connected to Cultural context as part of general Gender studies study, connecting several disciplines of science.
Gerontology, Psychiatry, Sleep in non-human animals, Quality of life and Demographic economics are her primary areas of study. Her research in Gerontology intersects with topics in Compromise and Staffing. Many of her research projects under Psychiatry are closely connected to Linkage, Prospective cohort study and Morning with Linkage, Prospective cohort study and Morning, tying the diverse disciplines of science together.
The concepts of her Sleep in non-human animals study are interwoven with issues in Herbal supplement and Medicalization. Sara Arber interconnects Social psychology, Life course approach, Neglect, Meaning and Value in the investigation of issues within Quality of life. Her Demographic economics study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Austerity and Socioeconomics.
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Gender differences in health in later life: the new paradox?
Sara Arber;Helen Cooper.
Social Science & Medicine (1999)
Gender and Later Life: A Sociological Analysis of Resources and Constraints
Sara Arber;Jay Ginn.
(1991)
Gender and inequalities in health in later life.
Sara Arber;Jay Ginn.
Social Science & Medicine (1993)
Feminist fallacies: a reply to Hakim on women's employment.
Ginn J;Arber S;Brannen J;Dale A.
British Journal of Sociology (1996)
Class, paid employment and family roles: Making sense of structural disadvantage, gender and health status
Sara Arber.
Social Science & Medicine (1991)
Comparing inequalities in women's and men's health: Britain in the 1990s
Sara Arber.
Social Science & Medicine (1997)
Multiple roles and health among British and Finnish women: the influence of socioeconomic circumstances.
Eero Lahelma;Sara Arber;Katariina Kivelä;Eva Roos.
Social Science & Medicine (2002)
Gender and socio-economic patterning of self-reported sleep problems in Britain.
Sara Arber;Marcos Bote;Robert Meadows.
Social Science & Medicine (2009)
Men: The Forgotten Carers
Sara Arber;Nigel Gilbert.
Sociology (1989)
Connecting gender and ageing : a sociological approach
Sara Arber;Jay Ginn.
(1995)
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