Literature DB >> 19778829

The social construction of occupational health and safety: barriers to environmental-labor health coalitions.

Heather M Zoller1.   

Abstract

Occupational and environmental health advocates promote the potential of alliances between workers and community members to address shared health problems resulting from industrial processes. Advocates recognize the need to overcome job blackmail, which has successfully pitted these groups against one another by threatening job loss in the face of calls for improved standards. This strategic form of issue management represents a dualism between good health and clean environments on one hand and jobs and tax bases on the other. The author argues that overcoming job blackmail requires attention not only to this dualism, but to the broader social construction of occupational and environmental health. The article describes a series of oppositional constructions, in both strategic organizational rhetoric and everyday cultural discourse, which reinforces job blackmail and impedes the development of solidarity among workers, neighbors, and environmental advocates. These dualisms polarize our views of work and environment, science, and social identity, thereby producing barriers to coalition formation. Understanding these reifications helps to build an activist agenda and identify potential resources for organizing to overcome these barriers.

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19778829     DOI: 10.2190/NS.19.3.b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Solut        ISSN: 1048-2911


  5 in total

Review 1.  Effects of social, economic, and labor policies on occupational health disparities.

Authors:  Carlos Eduardo Siqueira; Megan Gaydos; Celeste Monforton; Craig Slatin; Liz Borkowski; Peter Dooley; Amy Liebman; Erica Rosenberg; Glenn Shor; Matthew Keifer
Journal:  Am J Ind Med       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 2.214

2.  Communicating risks after exposure has ended: former workers' perspectives on PCBs.

Authors:  Kaori Fujishiro; Amy Mobley; Everett Lehman
Journal:  New Solut       Date:  2013-01-01

3.  Participation in a US community-based cardiovascular health study: investigating nonrandom selection effects related to employment, perceived stress, work-related stress, and family caregiving.

Authors:  Leslie A MacDonald; Kaori Fujishiro; Virginia J Howard; Paul Landsbergis; Misty J Hein
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2017-08-15       Impact factor: 3.797

4.  A qualitative exploration of work-related head injury: vulnerability at the intersection of workers' decision making and organizational values.

Authors:  P Kontos; A Grigorovich; B Nowrouzi; B Sharma; J Lewko; T Mollayeva; A Colantonio
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2017-10-18       Impact factor: 3.295

5.  Sociopolitical values and social institutions: Studying work and health equity through the lens of political economy.

Authors:  Kaori Fujishiro; Emily Q Ahonen; David Gimeno Ruiz de Porras; I-Chen Chen; Fernando G Benavides
Journal:  SSM Popul Health       Date:  2021-04-02
  5 in total

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