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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Merrill Singer , G. Derrick Hodge , Abigail E. Adams , Hans A. BaerPublisher: AltaMira Press Imprint: AltaMira Press Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 0.665kg ISBN: 9780759111905ISBN 10: 0759111901 Pages: 332 Publication Date: 16 January 2010 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis is anthropology for the upcoming century. Deeply relevant, morally engaged, theoretically astute, ethnographically rich. The authors take us on a global journey into the intersections of war and its devastating effects on health - the health of people, of politics, and of our tomorrows. -- Carolyn Nordstrom, University of Notre Dame The editors and contributors present comprehensive discussions on the health consequences of local, national, and global wars; war machinery; and war economies. War directly causes morbidity and mortality, and the destruction of economies and infrastructures has profound effects on the survivors, causing malnutrition, disabilities, public health disasters, mental health problems, and psychosocial trauma. The stressful aftermath of war is especially devastating to the most vulnerable members of a population, such as children, women, and elderly people. The book also touches on the damaging effects war has on human social life, such as the creation of lasting hatred between clashing populations. Furthermore, the war machine supported by key industries plays an important role in global warming, which in turn causes more environment-related health problems as well as additional armed conflicts over seeking and controlling increasingly scarce resources. The capitalist political economy characteristic of endless development and exploration is cited as one of the driving forces of the global war machine. A must read in contemporary critical medical anthropology. Essential. CHOICE, November 2010 An insightful review of some of the major consequences of war, including its impacts on global warming and child soldiers. This book provides valuable discussions of specific wars, ranging from Iraq to Central America, and on the long-term effects of war, such as the Spanish civil war. It should be required reading for everyone interested in the impact of armed conflict on global and international health. -- Barry S. Levy and Victor W. Sidel, Co-editors, War and Public Health and Terrorism and Public Health This is anthropology for the upcoming century. Deeply relevant, morally engaged, theoretically astute, ethnographically rich. The authors take us on a global journey into the intersections of war and its devastating effects on health -- the health of people, of politics, and of our tomorrows. -- Carolyn Nordstrom The editors and contributors present comprehensive discussions on the health consequences of local, national, and global wars; war machinery; and war economies. War directly causes morbidity and mortality, and the destruction of economies and infrastructures has profound effects on the survivors, causing malnutrition, disabilities, public health disasters, mental health problems, and psychosocial trauma. The stressful aftermath of war is especially devastating to the most vulnerable members of a population, such as children, women, and elderly people. The book also touches on the damaging effects war has on human social life, such as the creation of lasting hatred between clashing populations. Furthermore, the war machine supported by key industries plays an important role in global warming, which in turn causes more environment-related health problems as well as additional armed conflicts over seeking and controlling increasingly scarce resources. The capitalist political economy characteristic of endless development and exploration is cited as one of the driving forces of the global war machine. A must read in contemporary critical medical anthropology. Essential. CHOICE, November 2010 An insightful review of some of the major consequences of war, including its impacts on global warming and child soldiers. This book provides valuable discussions of specific wars, ranging from Iraq to Central America, and on the long-term effects of war, such as the Spanish civil war. It should be required reading for everyone interested in the impact of armed conflict on global and international health. -- Barry S. Levy and Victor W. Sidel An insightful review of some of the major consequences of war, including its impacts on global warming and child soldiers. This book provides valuable discussions of specific wars, ranging from Iraq to Central America, and on the long-term effects of war, such as the Spanish civil war. It should be required reading for everyone interested in the impact of armed conflict on global and international health.--Barry S. Levy and Victor W. Sidel This is anthropology for the upcoming century. Deeply relevant, morally engaged, theoretically astute, ethnographically rich. The authors take us on a global journey into the intersections of war and its devastating effects on health -- the health of people, of politics, and of our tomorrows. -- Carolyn Nordstrom The editors and contributors present comprehensive discussions on the health consequences of local, national, and global wars; war machinery; and war economies. War directly causes morbidity and mortality, and the destruction of economies and infrastructures has profound effects on the survivors, causing malnutrition, disabilities, public health disasters, mental health problems, and psychosocial trauma. The stressful aftermath of war is especially devastating to the most vulnerable members of a population, such as children, women, and elderly people. The book also touches on the damaging effects war has on human social life, such as the creation of lasting hatred between clashing populations. Furthermore, the war machine supported by key industries plays an important role in global warming, which in turn causes more environment-related health problems as well as additional armed conflicts over seeking and controlling increasingly scarce resources. The capitalist political economy characteristic of endless development and exploration is cited as one of the driving forces of the global war machine. A must read in contemporary critical medical anthropology. Essential. Choice, November 2010 An insightful review of some of the major consequences of war, including its impacts on global warming and child soldiers. This book provides valuable discussions of specific wars, ranging from Iraq to Central America, and on the long-term effects of war, such as the Spanish civil war. It should be required reading for everyone interested in the impact of armed conflict on global and international health. -- Barry S. Levy and Victor W. Sidel Author InformationMerrill Singer is currently senior research scientist at the Center of Health, Intervention and Prevention and professor in the department of anthropology at the University of Connecticut. He also is a research affiliate of the Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS (CIRA) at Yale University. G. Derrick Hodge is a medical anthropologist and political economist who currently teaches at the University of Missouri Kansas City. He is also an adjunct professor of medical anthropology to graduate students at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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