- Hopkins,A & Scambler,G (1977) How doctors deal with epilepsy. Lancet 1 183-186
- Scambler,G & Hopkins,A (1980) Social class, epileptic activity and disadvantage at work. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 34 129-133
- Scambler,G, Scambler,A & Craig,D (1981) Kinship and friendship networks and women’s demand for primary care. Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners 31 746-750
- Scambler,A & Scambler,G (1985) Menstrual symptoms, attitudes and consulting behaviour. Social Science and Medicine 25 1065-1068
- Scambler,G & Hopkins,A (1986) Being epileptic: coming to terms with stigma. Sociology of Health and Illness 8 26-43
- Scambler,G & Scambler,A (1986) Minor psychiatric morbidity and menstruation. International Journal of Social Psychiatry 32-3 9-15
- Boyton,R & Scambler,G (1988) Survey of general practitioners’ attitudes to AIDS in the North West Thames and East Anglian Regions. British Medical Journal 296 538-540
- Davies,D & Scambler,G (1988) Attitudes towards epilepsy in general practice. International Journal of Social Psychiatry 34 5-12
- Scambler,G & Hopkins,A (1990) Generating a model of epileptic stigma: the role of qualitative analysis. Social Science and Medicine 30 1187-1194
- Scambler,G, Peswani,R, Renton,A & Scambler,A (1990) Women prostitutes in the AIDS era. Sociology of Health and Illness 12 260-272
- Scambler,G (1993) Epilepsy and quality of life research. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 86 449-450
- Buchanan,N & Scambler,G (1993) Epilepsy as an educational model. Seizure: European Journal of Epilepsy 2 45-48
- Scambler,G (1994) Sociology, anthropology and health: issues of compatibility. British Medical Anthropology Review 2 16-18
- Scambler,G & Goraya,A (1994) The people’s health: Habermas, the public sphere and the role of social movements. British Medical Anthropology Review 2 35-43
- Scambler,G (1994) Patient perceptions of epilepsy and of doctors who manage epilepsy. Seizure: European Journal of Epilepsy 3 1-7
- Scambler,G & Goraya,A (1994) Movements for change: the new public health agenda. Critical Public Health 5 4-10
- Scambler,G & Scambler,A (1994) Health promotion, the sex industry and the challenge of change. Critical Public Health 5 30-35
- Scambler,G & Scambler,A (1995) Social change, health promotion and women sex workers in London: lessons from research and health care initiatives. Health Promotion International 10 17-24
- Levinson,R, McCranie,E, Scambler,G & Scambler,A (1995) Physician authority and the autonomy of nurses: attitudes of British and US medical students. Research in the Sociology of Health Care 12 355-368
- Scambler,G (1996) The ‘project of modernity’ and the parameters for a critical sociology: an argument with illustrations from medical sociology. Sociology 30 567-581
- Scambler,A, Scambler,G, Ridsdale,L & Robins,D (1996) Towards an evaluation of the effectiveness of the epilepsy nurse in primary care. Seizure: European Journal of Epilepsy 5 255-258
- Goraya,A & Scambler,G (1998) From old to new public health: role tensions and contradictions. Critical Public Health 8 141-151
- Scambler,G & Jennings,M (1998) On the periphery of the sex industry: female combat, male punters and feminist discourse. Journal of Sport and Social Issues 22 414-427
- Scambler,G (1998) Stigma and disease: changing paradigms. Lancet 352 1054-1055
- Scambler,G (1998) Theorizing modernity: Luhmann, Habermas, Elias and new perspectives on health and healing. Critical Public Health 8 239-246
- Scambler,G & Higgs,P (1999) Stratification, class and health: class relations and health inequalities in high modernity. Sociology 32 275-291
- Scambler,G & Higgs,P (2001) ‘The dog that didn’t bark’: taking class seriously in the health inequalities debate. Social Science and Medicine 52 157-159
- Scambler,G (2001) Critical realism, sociology and health inequalities: social class as a generative mechanism and its media of enactment. Journal of Critical Realism 4 35-42
- Scambler,G, Higgs,P & Jones,I (2002) A critical realist perspective on class relations and health inequalities. Research in the Sociology of Health Care 20 57-75
- Craig,G, Scambler,G & Spitz,L (2003) Why parents of children with neuro-developmental disabilities requiring gastrostomy feeding need more support. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology 45 183-188
- Scambler,G (2004) Re-framing stigma: felt and enacted stigma and challenges to the sociology of chronic and disabling conditions. Social Theory and Health 2 29-46
- Stevenson,F & Scambler,G (2005) The relationship between medicine and the public: the challenge of concordance. Health 9 5-21
- Stevenson,F & Scambler,G (2005) The relationship between medicine and the public: a rejoinder to Armstrong. Health 9 29-30
- Craig,G & Scambler,G (2006) Negotiating mothering against the odds: gastrostomy feeding, stigma, governmentality and disabled children. Social Science and Medicine 62 1115-1125
- Scambler,G & Kelleher,D (2006) New social and health movements: issues of representation and change. Critical Public Health 16 1-13
- Scambler,G (2006) Jigsaws, models and the sociology of stigma. Journal of Critical Realism 5 273-289
- Co-editor – Special Issue of Journal.
Scambler,G, Heijnders,M & van Brakel,W (Eds) (2006) HEALTH-RELATED STIGMA. Special Issue of Psychology, Health and Medicine. London; Routledge
- Scambler,G (2006) Sociology, social structure and health-related stigma. Psychology, Health and Medicine 11 288-295
- Greenhalgh,T, Robb,N & Scambler,G (2006) Communicative and strategic action in interpreted consultations in primary health care: a Habermasian perspective. Social Science and Medicine 63 1170-1187 (This paper was in the final short-list of three for the Royal College of General Practice’s best general practice paper for 2006)
- Jackson,S & Scambler,G (2006) Perceptions of evidence based medicine amongst traditional acupuncturists in the UK: resistance to biomedical modes of evaluation. Sociology of Health and Illness 29 412-429
- Scambler,G (2006) Epilepsy genetics: a response to Shostak and Ottman. Epilepsia 47 6-7
- Scambler,G (2007) Social structure and the production, reproduction and durability of health inequalities. Social Theory and Health 5 297-315
- Scambler,G (2007) Sex work stigma: opportunist migrants in London. Sociology 41 1079-1096
- Scambler,G & Paoli,F (2008) Health work, female sex workers and HIV/AIDS: global and local dimensions to stigma and deviance as barriers to effective interventions. Social Science and Medicine 65 1-15.
- Moffatt,S & Scambler,G (2008) Can welfare-rights advice targeted at older people reduce social exclusion? Ageing and Society 28 1-25
- Tjora,A & Scambler,G (2009) Square pegs and round holes: information systems, health care and the significance of contextual awareness. Social Science and Medicine 68 519-525.
- Scambler,G (2009) Review article: health-related stigma. Sociology of Health and Illness 31 441-455. (This was the journal’s most downloaded paper for 2009/2010.)
- Scambler,G (2009) Capitalism, workers, profit-making and the sociology of health inequalities. Social Theory and Health 7 117-128.
- Scambler,G (2010) Realism, sociology and the concept of ‘relations’. Nouvelles Perspectives en Sciences Sociales 5 87-93.
- Scambler,G (2010) Qualitative and quantitative methodologies in comparative research: an integrated approach. Special Issue, Salute e Societa. IX n.2, Supplemento 21-37.
- Scambler,G (2011) Epilepsy, stigma and quality of life. Neurology Asia. 16 35-36.
- Scambler,G (2011) ‘Tackling health inequalities’ and its pros, cons and contradictions: a commentary on Blackman et al. Social Science and Medicine 72 1975-1977.
- Scambler,G (2012) Review article: health inequalities. Sociology of Health and Illness 34 130-146.
- Scambler,G (2012) Between the devil …: a response to the commentaries of Cockerham and Coburn. Sociology of Health and Illness 34 151-153.
- Scambler,G & Scambler,A (2012) Underlying the riots: the invisible politics of class. Sociological Research Online http://www.socresonline.org.uk/16/4/25.html
- Tjora,A, Gronning.I & Scambler,G (2012) From fatness to badness: the modern morality of obesity. Health 17 266-283.
- Scambler,G (2012) Resistance in unjust times: Archer, structured agency and the sociology of health inequalities. Sociology 47 142-156.
- Scambler,G & Tjora,A (2012) ‘Familiarity bonds’: a neglected mechanism for middle-range theories of health and longevity? Medical Sociology Online.
- Buzdugan,R, Halli,S, Hiremath,J, Krishnamurthy,J, Moses,S, Blanchard,J, Scambler,G & Cowen,F (2012) The female sex work industry and the contextualization of HIV risk in a district in Karnataka, India: lessons for health protection. AIDS, Research and Treatment Article ID 371482 10 Pages.
- Annandale,E, Rabeharisoa,V, Scambler,G, Seale,C & Umberson,D (2013) Theorie sociologique et sociologie de la sante et de la medicine dans les revue internationales. Sciences Sociales et Sante 31 13-35
- Scambler,G (2013) Archer and ‘vulnerable fractured reflexivity’: a neglected social determinant of health? Social Theory and Health 11 302-315.
- Scambler,G (2014) Medical sociology in the twenty-first century: eight key books. Contemporary Sociology 43 155-160.
- Scambler,G, Scambler,S & Speed,E (2014) Civil society and the Health and Social Care Act in England and Wales: theory and praxis for the twenty-first century. Social Science & Medicine. 123 210-216.
- Napier,D … Scambler,G … (2014) Culture and health. Lancet 384 9954 1607-1639.
- Scambler,G & Scambler,S (2015) Theorizing health inequalities: the untapped potential of dialectical critical realism. Social Theory and Health 13 340-354.
- Broom,A, Broom,J, Kirby,E & Scambler,G (2015) The path of least resistance? Jurisdictions, responsibility and professional asymmetries in pharmacists’ accounts of antibiotic decisions in hospitals. Social Science and Medicine 146 95-103.
- Broom,A, Broom,J, Kirby,E & Scambler,G (2016) Nurses as antibiotic brokers: institutionalised praxis in the hospital. Qualitative Health Research. 27 1924-1935 i.
- Trondsen,M, Tjora,A, Broom,A & Scambler,G (2018) The symbolic affordances of a video-mediated gaze in emergency psychiatry. Social Science and Medicine 197 87-94.
- Scambler,G (2018) Heaping blame on shame: ‘weaponising stigma’ for neoliberal times. Sociological Review 66 766-782.
- Tsang,E, Loew,J, Scambler,G & Wilkinson,J (2018) Peasant sex workers in Metropolitan China and the pivotal concept of money. Asian Journal of Social Science 46 358-379.
- Scambler,S & Scambler,G (2019) Marx, financial capitalism and the fractured society: using Bhaskar’s dialectical critical realism to frame a transformatory sociological programme of action for resistance and change. The Journal of Classical Sociology 19 43-58.
- Scambler,G (2019) Dimensions of vulnerability salient for health: a sociological approach. Society, Health and Vulnerability 10 1-9.
- Scambler,G (2019) Sociology, social class, health inequalities and the avoidance of ‘classism’. Frontiers in Sociology 5 July.
- Scambler,G (2020) The fractured society: structures, mechanisms, tendencies. Journal of Critical Realism 19 1-13.
- Scambler,G (2020) COVID-19 as a ‘breaching experiment’: exposing the fractured society. Health Sociology Review 29 140-148.
- Scambler,G, Goodman,B & Scambler,M (2021) Sociology, knowledge and engagement: a case for a muckraking sociology of health and healthcare in the time of COVID. The authors declined to ‘dilute’ their arguments when invited to do so by a second set of reviewers for a leading international journal. They decided to withdraw the paper, which is now available at: https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/26pjn
- Scambler,G (2022) Let’s campaign for a fairer society in the aftermath of COVID-19. Frontiers in Sociology Open Access.
- Scambler,G (2023) Combining experiential knowledge with scholarship in charting the decline of the National Health Service in England. Frontiers in Sociology 8 Open Access.
- Scambler,G & Morgan,J (Forthcoming) Bridge building, medical sociology and beyond. An Interview with Graham Scambler. Journal of Critical Realism.
- Scambler,G Scarvarda,A & Scambler,S (Forthcoming) Whither sociological theory in the health field? Social Theory and Health.