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This impressive inquiry into Third World health problems linked to
industrialization offers positive directions for both national and
international strategies. Occupational health and safety issues,
often given low priority as developing countries seek to advance
their economies, are seen in their compelling importance through
studies on China, Colombia, Costa Rica, India, Malaysia, Nicaragua,
South Africa, and Sri Lanka. Part One describes the nature and
scope of work-related health problems in developing countries.
Health policies designed to meet national needs in the changing
work and industrial settings are analyzed through case studies in
Part Two. National strategies are considered in Part Three as means
of improving work-related health conditions, and Part Four proposes
strategies at the international level to improve Third World
occupational health. This is an authoritative analysis with
substantive recommendations which will affect the thinking of
health policy makers and public health planners in the
international community and the Third World.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R391
R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
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