| Literature DB >> 29370079 |
Yu-Ryong Yoon1, Kyeong Min Kwak2,3, Yeyong Choi4, Kanwoo Youn5, Jinwook Bahk6, Dong-Mug Kang7, Domyung Paek8,9.
Abstract
In 2009, asbestos was finally banned in Korea, about 70 years after the first opening of asbestos mines under Japanese control. After having presented the history of asbestos industry, together with its regulations and health effects over time, we constructed narrative analyses of how the asbestos issue under the prevailing risk system was managed by whom and for what purpose, to provide context for the change. We could identify five different phases: laissez-faire, politico-technical, economic-managerial, health-oriented cultural, and human rights-based post-cultural risk systems. The changes leading to the asbestos ban evolved over different phases, and each phase change was necessary to reach the final ban, in that, without resolving the previous issues by examining different categories of potential alternatives, either the final ban was not possible or, even if instituted, could not be sustained. An asbestos ban could be introduced when all the alternatives to these issues, including legitimate political windows, economic rationalizations, health risk protections, and human rights sensitivities, were available. We think the alternatives that we had were not in perfect shape, but in more or less loosely connected forms, and hence we had to know how to build solidarities between different stakeholders to compensate for the imperfections.Entities:
Keywords: Korea; asbestos ban; grassroots; health and safety stage; health-oriented cultural change; narrative analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29370079 PMCID: PMC5858267 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15020198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The amount of raw asbestos and asbestos products imported to Korea during 1963–2009.
Figure 2The level of asbestos air monitoring for different industries from 1984 to 2006.
Figure 3The number of cases compensated for asbestos-related occupational diseases in Korea between 2002 and 2014.
Stages of health and safety changes based on narrative analysis.
| Stages | Laissez-Faire | Technical | Managerial | Cultural | Post-Cultural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| When | Up to 1980 | 1981–1987 | 1988–1994 | 1995–2009 | 2010– | |
| Why (Objective) | Self-Interest Based | Politics Based | Economy Based | Health Based | Human Rights Based | |
| Who (Key Role Players) | No Body | Government Employers | Professionals Unions | Victims NGOs | Everybody | |
| What | Content | Self-care | Input Dominant | Process Dominant | Output Dominant | Input to Output |
| Risk Handling | Innate Heuristics | Assessment | Management | Communication | Continuous Cycle | |
| How | Politics | None | National Legislation | Corporate Policy | Court Cases | Open Mass Media |
| Enforcement | Self-Discipline | Code Based | Labor Based | System Based | Precautionary Way | |
| Problem Construct Level | None | Data | Information | Knowledge | Wisdom | |
Figure 4Crude asbestos production, import, export, and consumption among high-income banned countries from 1920 to 2011. Different calendar years were adjusted to year 0 for all the countries with an asbestos ban.
Figure 5Crude asbestos production, import, export, and consumption among middle- and low-income no-ban countries from 1920 to 2011.