The Politics of Asbestos: Understandings of Risk, Disease and Protest

Couverture
Routledge, 21 août 2012 - 240 pages

Around the world, asbestos-related diseases are on the increase. Meanwhile, in many newly-industrialising and developing countries, asbestos use continues unabated. This book, based on anthropological fieldwork in the UK, India and South Africa, explores people's understandings of their illness, risk, compensation and regulation, contrasting these personal and community narratives with formal medical and legal understandings.

Linda Waldman shows how the domination of medical and legal framings of risk and disease over those of workers, sufferers and activists can narrow the responses chosen by government. This provides important lessons for researchers, policy makers and regulators, demonstrating that opening up to alternative understandings can create more effective policy responses to move towards sustainability and social justice.

Published in association with the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC).

 

Table des matières

The Problem of Asbestos
1
Asbestos Litigation Pleural Plaques and Masculinity in the UK
19
Living with and Dying from Asbestos in South Africa
49
Science and Risk in Indian Asbestos Issues
73
Asbestos Diseases in South Africa and the UK
109
Comparative Framings of Asbestos and Disease
143
Diseased Identities and Social Justice
179
References
187
Index
209
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À propos de l'auteur (2012)

Linda Waldman is a Research Fellow in the Knowledge, Technology and Society Team at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), Sussex University. She is a social anthropologist whose research areas include indigenous identity and nationalism, environmental pollution, and asbestos disease and its socio-cultural ramifications.

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