Professor Jane South profile photo

Professor Jane South

Professor Leeds Beckett University

  • Leeds West Yorkshire

Jane South is Professor of Healthy Communities working in the field of community engagement and public health.

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Biography

Professor South is Professor of Healthy Communities working in the field of community engagement and public health. Her research focuses on how community life and volunteering contribute to good health.

As an academic leader, Jane has been at the forefront of establishing an evidence base for integrating community-centred approaches into public health. She has published widely on community-based prevention and is an expert on volunteer and peer interventions. From 2014-2023, she worked as a national adviser on communities for Public Health England (later the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities). She authored the PHE & NHS England (2015) Guide to community centred approaches for health and wellbeing, which has had considerable impact in policy and practice.

Passionate about research that makes a difference, Jane established CommUNIty - an innovative community-campus partnership for health initiative aimed at strengthening university links with local communities. She is also a Fellow of the Faculty of Public Health.

Industry Expertise

Writing and Editing
Education/Learning
Health and Wellness
Research

Areas of Expertise

Volunteering
Community Health
Public Health
Health
Health Promotion
Community
Active Citizenship

Languages

  • English

Event Appearances

Peers in Prison Settings (PiPS) Expert Symposium

Peers in Prison Settings (PiPS) Expert Symposium  Institute of Health and Wellbeing, Leeds Metropolitan University

Articles

Putting the public (back) into public health: leadership, evidence and action

Journal of Public Health

2019

There is a strong evidence-based rationale for community capacity building and community empowerment as part of a strategic response to reduce health inequalities. Within the current UK policy context, there are calls for increased public engagement in prevention and local decision-making in order to give people greater control over the conditions that determine health.

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A knowledge translation project on community-centred approaches in public health

Journal of Public Health

2018

This article examines the development and impact of a national knowledge translation project aimed at improving access to evidence and learning on community-centred approaches for health and wellbeing. Structural changes in the English health system meant that knowledge on community engagement was becoming lost and a fragmented evidence base was seen to impact negatively on policy and practice.

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An evidence-based framework on community-centred approaches for health: England, UK

Health Promotion International

2017

Community participation is a central concept for health promotion, covering a breadth of approaches, purposes and activities. This paper reports on a national knowledge translation project in England, UK, which resulted in a conceptual framework and typology of community-based approaches, published as national guidance.

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