1st Edition

Ecological Public Health Reshaping the Conditions for Good Health

By Geof Rayner, Tim Lang Copyright 2012
432 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

432 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

432 Pages 40 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

What is public health? To some, it is about drains, water, food and housing, all requiring engineering and expert management. To others, it is the State using medicine or health education and tackling unhealthy lifestyles.  This book argues that public health thinking needs an overhaul, a return to and modernisation around ecological principles. Ecological Public Health thinking, outlined... Read more

Preface  Acknowledgements  Glossary  Part 1: Images and Models of Public Health  1. Introducing the Notion of Ecological Public Health  2. Defining Public Health  3. The Recevied Wisdom of Public Health  Part 2: The Transitions which Public Health has to Address  Introduction to Part 2  4. Demographic Transition  5. Epidemiological and Health Transition  6. Urban Transition  7. Energy Transition  8. Economic Transition  9. The Nutrition Transition  10. Biological and Ecological Transition  11. Cultural Transition  12. Democratic Transition  Conclusion to Part 2 – An Overview of the Transitions  Part 3: Reshaping the Conditions for Good Health  13. The Implications of Ecological Public Health  References  Index

Biography

Both authors have long been active in the international public health movement as practitioners, advocates, researchers and thinkers. Geof Rayner PhD is an independent social scientist working in public health, and is currently a Research Fellow at the Centre for Food Policy, City University London and Professor Associate at Brunel University. Tim Lang PhD is a social scientist specialising in food, public health, the environment and social justice, and is Professor of Food Policy at City University London.

Ecological Public Health came Highly Commended in the Public Health category for the 2013 BMA Medical Book and Patient Information Awards.

"Rich in understanding the history of the public health movement, the authors argue that a new ecological sense of public health is emerging based on the recognition of the limits on nature, that nature no longer offers an endless cornucopia of its resources for human use or that the biological world can be ceaselessly altered to human advantage." – Food Ethics Council Newsletter, July 2012 

"...this book offers an exemplary account of ecological thinking and is extremely persuasive in arguing for the adoption of an ecological perspective when addressing the seemingly intractable health problems of modern society. It has the scope to invigorate public health, as both project and practice, by providing new and important ways of thinking about both the aetiology of health and respondent intervention activities. As a result, I would recommend it to anyone with an interest in public health, from students and academics to policy makers and practitioners." – Rhiannon Evans, Cardiff University, in Critical Public Health (2013, vol.23)

"Their analysis of the food system, its current negative impacts and the potential for change is exemplary, drawing on their own scholarship and work with policy makers… Overall, the authors’ work on historical and conceptual synthesis is illuminating." – Donald C. Cole, University of Toronto, Canada