Literature DB >> 27749196

The Entanglements of Agrarian Ethics With Agrarian Risks and Leveraging Them in Agricultural Health Safety.

Casper G Bendixsen1.   

Abstract

Agriculture is the most dangerous occupation in the United States for both workers and bystanders. Family farms highlight an intersection of domesticity and labor. Agrarian ethics of animal husbandry, land stewardship, and kinship are often conflated and constructed to accommodate unpredictable risks (e.g., weather, financial markets). Here, the right or good agricultural practice is assessed in light of an acute event. Risks of illness and injury are often relegated to the realm of acute unpredictability and accepted as intrinsic to desirable ways of life. The article presents a description of agrarian ethics and risks generated from personal experience and ethnographic inquiries in the Midwest, the Intermountain West, and Texas over the past 10 years. This article assesses health and safety within agrarian ethics. The results and discussion lead us to an important conversation about how we can be more detailed in the use of terms such as "cultural appropriateness." It also raises the question as to what is really at stake in public health perspectives like those found in the socioecological and extended parallel process models when deployed in agricultural health and safety.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anthropology; ethics; ethnography; risk

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 27749196      PMCID: PMC5545808          DOI: 10.1080/1059924X.2016.1248308

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Agromedicine        ISSN: 1059-924X            Impact factor:   1.675


  7 in total

1.  Biomedical ethics, public-health risk assessment, and the naturalistic fallacy.

Authors:  Kevin Elliott
Journal:  Public Aff Q       Date:  2002-10

2.  Psychological and social risks of behavioral research.

Authors:  Susan M Labott; Timothy P Johnson
Journal:  IRB       Date:  2004 May-Jun

3.  The effects of fear appeal message repetition on perceived threat, perceived efficacy, and behavioral intention in the extended parallel process model.

Authors:  Jingyuan Jolie Shi; Sandi W Smith
Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2015-08-25

4.  If Ethics Committees were Designed for Ethnography.

Authors:  Martin Tolich; Maureen H Fitzgerald
Journal:  J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics       Date:  2006-06       Impact factor: 1.742

Review 5.  An ecological perspective on health promotion programs.

Authors:  K R McLeroy; D Bibeau; A Steckler; K Glanz
Journal:  Health Educ Q       Date:  1988

Review 6.  Occupational health policy and immigrant workers in the agriculture, forestry, and fishing sector.

Authors:  Amy K Liebman; Melinda F Wiggins; Clermont Fraser; Jeffrey Levin; Jill Sidebottom; Thomas A Arcury
Journal:  Am J Ind Med       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 2.214

7.  Human research ethics committees: examining their roles and practices.

Authors:  Marilys Guillemin; Lynn Gillam; Doreen Rosenthal; Annie Bolitho
Journal:  J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 1.742

  7 in total

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