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Originally presented as papers in the 1991 British Sociological
Association Conference on Health and Society, Locating Health
represents a valuable addition to the 'health inequalities' debate
by extending our gaze beyond the traditional locations to include
place, consumption and lifestyle. It offers reconceptualization of
key theoretical terms, including work, income, and public/private
domains as well as addressing the reciprocal influence of health
and social location, for example early retirement; and highlighting
the health consequences of multiple locations, such as gender and
class, gender and age.
Private Risk and Public Dangers is comprised of a collection of
chapters which were originally papers presented in the 1991 British
Sociological Association Conference on Health and Society, and they
address a range of private risks and public dangers. Issues covered
vary from the response to HIV and AIDS and 'foetal alcohol
syndrome' to the nature of accidents. These seemingly diverse
social situations within which emerges is that we need a more
sociologically informed understanding of the personal shading the
public dangers they are expected to manage.
Providing a critical review of the current state of health promotion research. This book re-conceptualises the field of health promotion as collaborative and integrating enterprise, rather than as a battlefield for disciplinary and intellectual clashes. It makes a significant contribution to ongoing epistemological, theoretical and methodological debates in health promotion research. With contributors from Sweden, Switzerland, Denmark, Ireland, the UK and the US, Researching Health Promotion will be of interest to students and professionals working in health promotion, public health, medicine and health policy.
Originally presented as papers in the 1991 British Sociological
Association Conference on Health and Society, Locating Health
represents a valuable addition to the 'health inequalities' debate
by extending our gaze beyond the traditional locations to include
place, consumption and lifestyle. It offers reconceptualization of
key theoretical terms, including work, income, and public/private
domains as well as addressing the reciprocal influence of health
and social location, for example early retirement; and highlighting
the health consequences of multiple locations, such as gender and
class, gender and age.
Private Risk and Public Dangers is comprised of a collection of
chapters which were originally papers presented in the 1991 British
Sociological Association Conference on Health and Society, and they
address a range of private risks and public dangers. Issues covered
vary from the response to HIV and AIDS and 'foetal alcohol
syndrome' to the nature of accidents. These seemingly diverse
social situations within which emerges is that we need a more
sociologically informed understanding of the personal shading the
public dangers they are expected to manage.
went to Vietnam at Vietnam at very short notice to do a job for the
World Bank about housing reconstruction after Typhoon Damrey in
Novemeber 2017. Others on the team were reporting on transport,
irrigation, agriculture, fisheries and economic development.
Unfortunately I pulled a calf muscle at dawn on day one running
along Nha Trang beach, as shown in the photo, so I didn't see as
much of Vietnam as I would have liked. Nevertheless I did go north
up the coast and inland to the highlands to see ieffect of storm
and progress in recovery. I loved Vietnam. I liked the food, the
way the country is developing and the confidence and directness of
the people. I wish I could have stayed a month and seen more.
I first met Maria Ximena when she talked about Cazuca, a barrio to
the south west of Bogota and I visited Colombia three times.
Working with young architects from the Universidad Piloto and a
Women's Foundation we devised plans to improve the neighbourhood. I
also describe visits to Cartagena, Santa Marta, Valledupar and the
Tayrona National Park where I met and talked to Kogi Indians.
An account of a trip to Thailand to test using satellite imagery to
monitor long-term disaster recovery. We had two or three days in
the hot and steamy concrete jungle of Bangkok and then spent a week
in Ban Nam Khem, a fishing village on the west coast, that had been
badly damaged by the tsunami. We had a day off and visited the
fabulous `James Bond' island in Phnag Nga Bay Phuket where Roger
Moore fought Scaramanga played by Christopher Lee in `Man with the
Golden Gun'.
We went to St Petersburg in 2009 for a meeting on an EU project
called ISAAC about heritage tourism. The May weather was marvellous
and we stayed in a nice hotel next to the Fontanka River in walking
distance of Nevsky Prospect. The high spot of our trip was a
private tour of the Impressionist paintings in the Hermitage and
Russian art in the Russian Museum. The Hermitage Museum, founded in
1764 by Catherine the Great is spectacular - lavish, ornate with
the most impressive collection of art. The collections occupy a
complex of six historic buildings along Palace Embankment,
including the Winter Palace, home of Tsars, centre of imperial
power, scene of the Bloody Sunday massacre of protesters in 1905
and subject to storming by Red Army troops in the October 1917
Revolution. We also had a boat trip to Peterhof, , the Russian
Versailles, begun in 1714 by Peter the Great as his Monplaisir'.
This is an account of a trip with Emily So of Cambridge University
in 2006 to the areas affected by the Pakistan earthquake of 8
October 2005. The aim of for Emily was to conduct a survey of
survivors of the earthquake about their injuries as part of her
PhD. My aim was to shed light on the factors affecting long-term
recovery after major disasters. We interviewed people in Islamabad
responsible for coordinating relief and reconstruction and visited
the areas affected by the earthquake. We also drove up the
beautiful Kaghan Valley as far as we were able. Understanding some
of the issues faced by survivors of the earthquake was a powerful
experience for us both and we were treated with the warmest
hospitality and generosity by everyone we met in Pakistan
The GR20 is one of the great walks of Europe, comparable in length
to the Tour of Mont Blanc and similar in quality to the Cuillen
Ridge on Skye. It runs across Corsica northwest to southeast. It
crosses jagged peaks, that are snow covered for much of the year.
It is over a hundred and thirty miles long, involves over 25,000
metres of ascent and descent and takes nearly two weeks. It is
divided into two sections by a small gauge railway that crosses the
GR20 at Vizzavona. We walked the northern part from Calenza in 2001
and the southern part from Conca in 2004, when we had just turned
sixty. Like so many who do this walk, we found our own way,
carrying all our food and the minimum of gear and clothing. This is
an account of the walk, plus excursions to the Aiguilles de Bavella
and Monte Renosu, two high level variants. It will introduce you to
the joys of multi-day high level walking and maybe encourage you to
try for yourselves.
El Autana is a sandstone tepuy or butte about 400 miles south of
Caracas in the Amazon Territory of Venezuela. We climbed the left
hand ridge in the photograph in three days in 1974. A cathedral
sized cave pierces the mountain from side to side, so that light
shines through about 400 ft from the top. Like all good jungle
mountains, this too has its indian legend. At dusk, when the sun
shines through the cave that pierces the mountain from one side to
side, the Piaroa indians call the cave the `Eye of the Gods'.
Stephen Platt, David Nott, Wilmer Perez la Riva and Carlos Reyes
climbed the North Ridge in its entirety and then descended to the
caves were we spent three nights, exploring the galleries and
traversing around the mountain along the horizontal fault line at
the height of the cave. On the third day we completed the ridge to
the summit. Night caught us abseiling down the last overhanging
300ft wall and we stumbled back to base camp by the meagre light of
our only pocket torch
Australia is far-flung and until the airplane overcame the tyranny
of distance Australia was terra incognita. Aboriginals of Australia
are one of the oldest living peoples of the world having occupied
the same territory longer than any other human population, about
50,000 years. They believe their ancestors brought the world into
being by naming the landscape and the creatures that inhabit it.
They sing to keep the land alive and their songs are stories of
ancestor figures and a GPS to help guide them over vast distances.
In Sydney and were treated to a spectacular exhibition of
Aboriginal art and dance depicting places along the Canning Stock
Route in Western Australia but we missed a visit to the Opera House
and ferry rides across the harbour because of a mix-up with the
flights. In Perth we attended the 60th Perth International Arts
Festival with a dawn-dusk opening that aimed to reconcile the
Nyungar guardians of Mudurup Rocks at Cottesloe with modern
Australia.
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