The New Public Health: Discourses, Knowledges, StrategiesSAGE, 1996 M12 30 - 192 páginas Petersen and Lupton focus critically on the new public health, assessing its implications for the concepts of self, embodiment and citizenship. They argue that the new public health is used as a source of moral regulation and for distinguishing between self and other. They also explore the implications of modernist belief in the power of science and the ability of experts to solve problems through rational administrative means that underpin the strategies and rhetoric of the new public health. |
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Página 8
... problems ' and to find solutions for dealing with them . Profes- sional expertise remains privileged over lay expertise , as is highly evident in health educational advice to populations on how they should regulate their lives to ...
... problems ' and to find solutions for dealing with them . Profes- sional expertise remains privileged over lay expertise , as is highly evident in health educational advice to populations on how they should regulate their lives to ...
Página 13
... problems and to those people in less fortunate circum- stances in other countries . The emergence of a ' duties discourse ' and a greater emphasis on the duties implied by rights is reflected in a wide variety of new public health ...
... problems and to those people in less fortunate circum- stances in other countries . The emergence of a ' duties discourse ' and a greater emphasis on the duties implied by rights is reflected in a wide variety of new public health ...
Página 14
... problems and problematizing new issues , translating political concerns about economic productivity , innovation , industrial unrest , social stabil- ity , law and order , normality and pathology and so forth into the vocabulary of ...
... problems and problematizing new issues , translating political concerns about economic productivity , innovation , industrial unrest , social stabil- ity , law and order , normality and pathology and so forth into the vocabulary of ...
Página 16
... problems ( see , for example , Crawford 1977 ) . This critique loses much of its potency as the domain of public health expands and everyone becomes , in effect , a ' victim ' . As mentioned earlier , the theoretical project of the new ...
... problems ( see , for example , Crawford 1977 ) . This critique loses much of its potency as the domain of public health expands and everyone becomes , in effect , a ' victim ' . As mentioned earlier , the theoretical project of the new ...
Página 27
... problems ' . The British Acheshon Report on the Public Health published in 1988 , for example , gave a strong emphasis to the role of epidemiology in contemporary public health practice , particularly in the monitoring of the health ...
... problems ' . The British Acheshon Report on the Public Health published in 1988 , for example , gave a strong emphasis to the role of epidemiology in contemporary public health practice , particularly in the monitoring of the health ...
Contenido
1 | |
27 | |
Chapter 3 The Healthy Citizen | 61 |
Chapter 4 Risk Discourse and The Environment | 89 |
Chapter 5 The Healthy City | 120 |
Chapter 6 The Duty to Participate | 146 |
Conclusion | 174 |
References | 182 |
Index | 199 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The New Public Health: Discourses, Knowledges, Strategies Alan R. Petersen (Ph. D.),Deborah Lupton Vista previa limitada - 1996 |
The New Public Health: Discourses, Knowledges, Strategies Alan Petersen,Deborah Lupton Vista de fragmentos - 1996 |
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action activities adopted approach areas argued Ashton assumptions Australian behaviour body cancer chapter Chittagong City Corporation cholesterol citizens citizenship community participation concept conceptualised concerns constructed contemporary context cultural death defined dominant drug Earth Summit ecological economic effects emerged emphasis engage environment environmental risks epidemiological research example experts focus global global warming goals green movements groups health promotion health status Healthism Healthy Cities project HIV/AIDS human health identified identity illness implications individuals involving knowledge lifestyle linked living Lupton men's health ment modern modernist moral movement nature neo-liberal networks nineteenth century notion organisations particular passive smoking physical political pollution population practices problems processes programs public health discourses public health journal rational regulation relation responsibility role scientific seen sexual smoking social society sociocultural space and place strategies targets tend theory Tsouros urban Western women World Health Organization