Lethal But Legal: Corporations, Consumption, and Protecting Public Health

Author:   Nicholas Freudenberg (Distinguished Professor of Public Health, Hunter College, Distinguished Professor of Public Health, Hunter College, City University of New York)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780190495374


Pages:   360
Publication Date:   07 April 2016
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Lethal But Legal: Corporations, Consumption, and Protecting Public Health


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Full Product Details

Author:   Nicholas Freudenberg (Distinguished Professor of Public Health, Hunter College, Distinguished Professor of Public Health, Hunter College, City University of New York)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9780190495374


ISBN 10:   0190495375
Pages:   360
Publication Date:   07 April 2016
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

1. Manufacturing Disease: Unhealth Products Become Ubiquitous 2. The Public Health Evidence: How Corporate Practices Contribute to Global Epidemics of Chronic Disease and Injuries 3. Corporations Take Control: A New Political and Economic Order Emerges 4. The Corporate Consumption Complex 5. The Corporate Ideology of Consumption 6. The Health Impact of Corporate Managed Globalization 7. Optimism Past, Present, and Future: The Buiding Blocks for a Movement 8. Wanted: A Movement for a Healther, More Sustainable Future Afterword

Reviews

Provides an advocate's perspective on how industry shapes health, and in Freudenberg's words, 'This is something not only to think about, but to rant about.' * Health Affairs * An exceptionally detailed and thought-provoking historical profile of how corporations have risen to power and maintained their influence in the shaping of our societies. * The Lancet * A richly detailed account of how corporate power has been used to corrupt health and well-being, along with excellent advice on what readers can do about it. * Kirkus * Freudenberg brings clarity to our understanding of these fundamental determinants of population health in a way that no one else has. * Sandro Galea, Dean, Boston University School of Public Health * After documenting how multinational corporations manipulate us into hyperconsumption, this book goes on to identify the strategies we can, together, use to liberate ourselves. * Richard Wilkinson, Emeritus Professor of Social Epidemiology, University of Nottingham * Freudenberg lays out the labyrinth of connections between corporate misbehavior and the health of the world, then and gives a roadmap to fix it. I love this book. * Cheryl G. Healton, Director, NYU Global Institute of Public Health; former President and CEO, American Legacy Foundation * A reservoir of constructive indignation that can arouse all Americans who adhere to basic human values. * Ralph Nader * Freudenberg details how six industries * food and beverage, tobacco, alcohol, firearms, pharmaceutical, and automotive * Lethal But Legal has scholarly merit and marshals compelling evidence to support its central thesis. * Bonnie Stabile, George Mason University; World Medical and Health Policy *


Freudenberg details how six industries food and beverage, tobacco, alcohol, firearms, pharmaceutical, and automotive A reservoir of constructive indignation that can arouse all Americans who adhere to basic human values. Ralph Nader Freudenberg lays out the labyrinth of connections between corporate misbehavior and the health of the world, then and gives a roadmap to fix it. I love this book. Cheryl G. Healton, Director, NYU Global Institute of Public Health; former President and CEO, American Legacy Foundation After documenting how multinational corporations manipulate us into hyperconsumption, this book goes on to identify the strategies we can, together, use to liberate ourselves. Richard Wilkinson, Emeritus Professor of Social Epidemiology, University of Nottingham Freudenberg brings clarity to our understanding of these fundamental determinants of population health in a way that no one else has. Sandro Galea, Dean, Boston University School of Public Health A richly detailed account of how corporate power has been used to corrupt health and well-being, along with excellent advice on what readers can do about it. Kirkus An exceptionally detailed and thought-provoking historical profile of how corporations have risen to power and maintained their influence in the shaping of our societies. The Lancet Provides an advocate's perspective on how industry shapes health, and in Freudenberg's words, 'This is something not only to think about, but to rant about.' Health Affairs


Freudenberg details how six industries -- food and beverage, tobacco, alcohol, firearms, pharmaceutical, and automotive -- use pretty much the same playbook to defend the sales of health-threatening products. This playbook, largely developed by the tobacco industry, disregards human health and poses greater threats to our existence than any communicable disease you can name. --New York Times A reservoir of constructive indignation that can arouse all Americans who adhere to basic human values. --Ralph Nader Freudenberg lays out the labyrinth of connections between corporate misbehavior and the health of the world, then and gives a roadmap to fix it. I love this book. --Cheryl G. Healton, Director, NYU Global Institute of Public Health; former President and CEO, American Legacy Foundation After documenting how multinational corporations manipulate us into hyperconsumption, this book goes on to identify the strategies we can, together, use to liberate ourselves. --Richard Wilkinson, Emeritus Professor of Social Epidemiology, University of Nottingham Freudenberg brings clarity to our understanding of these fundamental determinants of population health in a way that no one else has. --Sandro Galea, Dean, Boston University School of Public Health A richly detailed account of how corporate power has been used to corrupt health and well-being, along with excellent advice on what readers can do about it. --Kirkus An exceptionally detailed and thought-provoking historical profile of how corporations have risen to power and maintained their influence in the shaping of our societies. --The Lancet Provides an advocate's perspective on how industry shapes health, and in Freudenberg's words, 'This is something not only to think about, but to rant about.' --Health Affairs This book may well make you angry and inconsolable. You will ask yourself how a few industries--food, tobacco, alcohol, pharmaceutical, gun, and auto-have managed to act with virtual impunity and enrich themselves at the expense of our health and the health of the planet... This is a comprehensive, gutsy, and absorbing book that tells a compelling story of the major vectors of 21st century diseases... It should be required reading. --American Journal of Public Health The text offers compelling evidence that an audience beyond academia could benefit from reading this book. -World Medicine and Health Policy


"""Freudenberg details how six industries -- food and beverage, tobacco, alcohol, firearms, pharmaceutical, and automotive -- use pretty much the same playbook to defend the sales of health-threatening products. This playbook, largely developed by the tobacco industry, disregards human health and poses greater threats to our existence than any communicable disease you can name."" --New York Times ""A reservoir of constructive indignation that can arouse all Americans who adhere to basic human values."" --Ralph Nader ""Freudenberg lays out the labyrinth of connections between corporate misbehavior and the health of the world, then and gives a roadmap to fix it. I love this book."" --Cheryl G. Healton, Director, NYU Global Institute of Public Health; former President and CEO, American Legacy Foundation ""After documenting how multinational corporations manipulate us into hyperconsumption, this book goes on to identify the strategies we can, together, use to liberate ourselves."" --Richard Wilkinson, Emeritus Professor of Social Epidemiology, University of Nottingham ""Freudenberg brings clarity to our understanding of these fundamental determinants of population health in a way that no one else has."" --Sandro Galea, Dean, Boston University School of Public Health ""A richly detailed account of how corporate power has been used to corrupt health and well-being, along with excellent advice on what readers can do about it."" --Kirkus ""An exceptionally detailed and thought-provoking historical profile of how corporations have risen to power and maintained their influence in the shaping of our societies."" --The Lancet ""Provides an advocate's perspective on how industry shapes health, and in Freudenberg's words, 'This is something not only to think about, but to rant about.'"" --Health Affairs ""This book may well make you angry and inconsolable. You will ask yourself how a few industries--food, tobacco, alcohol, pharmaceutical, gun, and auto-have managed to act with virtual impunity and enrich themselves at the expense of our health and the health of the planet... This is a comprehensive, gutsy, and absorbing book that tells a compelling story of the major vectors of 21st century diseases... It should be required reading."" --American Journal of Public Health ""The text offers compelling evidence that an audience beyond academia could benefit from reading this book."" -World Medicine and Health Policy"


Author Information

Nicholas Freudenberg, PhD, MPH, is Distinguished Professor of Public Health at the City University of New York School of Public Health at Hunter College and founder and director of Corporations and Health Watch (www.corporationsandhealth.org), an international network of activists and researchers that monitors the business practices of the alcohol, automobile, firearms, food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and tobacco industries.

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