Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick - Christopher Hamlin

Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick

Christopher Hamlin

出版时间

2009-01-08

ISBN

9780521102117

评分

★★★★★
书籍介绍

The 1830s and 1840s are the formative years of modern public health in Britain, when the poor law bureaucrat Edwin Chadwick conceived his vision of public health through public works and began the campaign for the construction of the kinds of water and sewage works that ultimately became the standard components of urban infrastructure throughout the developed world. This book first explores that vision and campaign against the backdrop of the great 'condition-of-England' questions of the period, of what rights and expectations working people could justifiably have in regard to political participation, food, shelter and conditions of work. It examines the ways Chadwick's sanitarianism fitted the political needs of the much-hated Poor Law Commission and of Whig and Tory governments, each seeking some antidote to revolutionary Chartism. It then reviews the Chadwickians' efforts to solve the host of problems they met in trying to implement the sanitary idea: of what responsibilities central and local units of government, and private contractors, were to have; of how townspeople could be persuaded to embark on untried public technologies; of where the new public health experts were to come from; and of how elegant technical designs were to be fitted to the unique social, political, and geographic circumstances of individual towns.

用户评论
融政治、思想、经济、社会、文化、科技于一炉,既讨论中央设计和推行,又讨论地方实践和应对。文笔超赞的好书啊。不过对19世纪中期英国史背景知识的要求比较高。
Water and sewers were not enough...
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