J
John Eyles
Researcher at University of the Witwatersrand
Publications - 254
Citations - 11281
John Eyles is an academic researcher from University of the Witwatersrand. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Public health. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 253 publications receiving 10678 citations. Previous affiliations of John Eyles include University of London & West Health.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluating Qualitative Research in Social Geography: Establishing ‘Rigour’ in Interview Analysis
Jamie Baxter,John Eyles +1 more
TL;DR: A review of 31 empirical and eighteen substantive papers by qualitative social geographers mainly using in-depth interviews reveals little explicit reference to the principle(s) adopted to enhance "rigour" and to ensure meaningful inference as mentioned in this paper.
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Deliberations about deliberative methods: issues in the design and evaluation of public participation processes
Julia Abelson,Pierre-Gerlier Forest,John Eyles,Patricia Smith,Elisabeth Martin,François-Pierre Gauvin +5 more
TL;DR: This critical review of the literature is used as the basis for developing general principles that can be used to guide the design and evaluation of public involvement processes for the health-care sector in particular.
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Developing and Implementing a Triangulation Protocol for Qualitative Health Research
TL;DR: The authors collected qualitative data within a parallel–case study design using key informant interviews as well as document analysis to present an empirical example of triangulation in qualitative health research.
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A GIS–Environmental Justice Analysis of Particulate Air Pollution in Hamilton, Canada:
Michael Jerrett,Richard T. Burnett,Pavlos S. Kanaroglou,John Eyles,Norm Finkelstein,Chris Giovis,Jeffrey R. Brook +6 more
TL;DR: This paper used a universal kriging procedure to interpolate data from twenty-three monitoring stations in Hamilton (1985-94) to develop an estimate of likely pollution values across the city based on annual geometric means and extreme events.
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Who you know, where you live: social capital, neighbourhood and health
TL;DR: The neighbourhood and associational involvement relationships with health were not dependent upon one another, suggesting that neighbourhood of residence did not help to explain the positive health effects of this particular measure of social capital.