Barely a day goes by without news of the latest public health threat from the American media. Some of us are told we live in a "cancer cluster"-an area with a disproportionate number of cancer deaths. During the summer months, those who live in or near urban areas are bombarded with daily smog measurements and air pollution alerts. City water supplies are frequently called health hazards. At times, it seems as though virtually everything we eat and drink is denounced as bad for us by some "public health expert." Our cars burn too much gasoline; we own too many firearms; we are too fat; some of us are too skinny. Americans today are living longer than they ever have before. Why the almost daily announcements of new public health threats and proclamations of impending crises? Bennett and DiLorenzo address this question and others here. They begin by examining the large public health bureaucracy, its preoccupation with expanding governmental programs, and its concern with political issues that too often have little to do with improving public health. Then they trace the evolution of the American public health movement from its founding after the Civil War to the 1950s. They describe the transformation of public health's focus from the eradication of disease to social policy as a by-product of the 1960s. Bennett and DiLorenzo catalogue the "radicalization" of the public health movement by discussing its numerous political initiatives. They include case studies of the politicization of the public health movement in America. The authors reveal various methods of statistical manipulation that certain public health researchers use to "cook the data" in order to achieve politically correct results. A final chapter discusses the implications of the transformation of public health from pathology to politics. This vigorously argued analysis sees the public health movement as claiming expertise on virtually every social issue, from poverty to human rights. Students of public policy and public health officials, along with readers interested in public health issues, will find this absorbing reading.
The Pathology of Politics: Violence, Betrayal, Corruption, Secrecy, and Propaganda
This unique book reviews specialist literature and provides a profile of the personality disorder of narcissism displayed by five leaders - Hosni Mubarak, Muammar Qaddafi, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Ali Abdullah Saleh, and Bashar al-Assad - ...
Contains the substance of lectures delivered at Columbia University during 1909 which focused on budgetary issues such as, the growth of expenditure, creating a national budget, constitutional agencies of budget...
Ce livre a été publié à l'occasion de l'exposition "Blood : perspectives on art, power, politics, and pathology" au Museum für Angewandte Kunst et à la Schirn Kunsthalle, à Francfort,...
Much has been written about how government works, but there has been little systematic analysis of how government does not work. This book analyses the whole range of public policy...
... 224 Palin, Sarah, 215; elitism, critique of, 216, 218420; intelligence of, 216417; populism of, and degree fetish, critique of, 216, 218 Panofsky, Erwin, 247 Paradiso (Dante), 254 Parrington, Vernon L., 7 Partisan Review (magazine), ...
Excerpt from The Cost of Our National Government: A Study in Political Pathology This volume contains the substance of lectures delivered on the George Blumenthal Foundation at Columbia University in the fall and winter of 1909.
Excerpt from The Cost of Our National Government: A Study in Political Pathology This volume contains the substance of lectures deliv ered on the George Blumenthal Foundation at Columbia University in the fall and winter of 1909.
From market crisis to market boom, from welfare to wealth care, from homelessness to helplessness, and an all-out assault on the global environment-these are just some of the indecencies of contemporary economic life that Profit Pathology ...
With its useful footnotes, selective bibliography and good index Professor Stern's study is American scholarship at its best."-"International Affairs"