Book contents
- Global Health
- Global Health
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Section 1 Global Health: Definitions and Descriptions
- Section 2 Global Health Ethics, Responsibilities, and Justice: Some Central Issues
- Section 3 Analyzing Some Reasons for Poor Health and Responsibilities to Address Them
- Chapter 11 Trade and Health
- Chapter 12 Debt, Structural Adjustment, and Health
- Chapter 13 The International Arms Trade and Global Health
- Chapter 14 Allocating Resources in Humanitarian Medicine
- Chapter 15 Development Assistance for Health
- Chapter 16 Geopolitics, Disease, and Inequalities in Emerging Economies
- Chapter 17 Neoliberalism, Power Relations, Ethics, and Global Health
- Chapter 18 Morbid Symptoms, Organic Crises, and Enclosures of the Commons
- Chapter 19 Challenging the Global Extractive Order
- Section 4 Environmental/Ecological Considerations and Planetary Health
- Section 5 The Importance of Including Cross-Cultural Perspectives and the Need for Dialogue
- Section 6 Shaping the Future
- Index
- References
Chapter 17 - Neoliberalism, Power Relations, Ethics, and Global Health
from Section 3 - Analyzing Some Reasons for Poor Health and Responsibilities to Address Them
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2021
- Global Health
- Global Health
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Section 1 Global Health: Definitions and Descriptions
- Section 2 Global Health Ethics, Responsibilities, and Justice: Some Central Issues
- Section 3 Analyzing Some Reasons for Poor Health and Responsibilities to Address Them
- Chapter 11 Trade and Health
- Chapter 12 Debt, Structural Adjustment, and Health
- Chapter 13 The International Arms Trade and Global Health
- Chapter 14 Allocating Resources in Humanitarian Medicine
- Chapter 15 Development Assistance for Health
- Chapter 16 Geopolitics, Disease, and Inequalities in Emerging Economies
- Chapter 17 Neoliberalism, Power Relations, Ethics, and Global Health
- Chapter 18 Morbid Symptoms, Organic Crises, and Enclosures of the Commons
- Chapter 19 Challenging the Global Extractive Order
- Section 4 Environmental/Ecological Considerations and Planetary Health
- Section 5 The Importance of Including Cross-Cultural Perspectives and the Need for Dialogue
- Section 6 Shaping the Future
- Index
- References
Summary
Spectacular progress, both intellectual and material, has been achieved through the Enlightenment notion of the centrality of the individual and the supremacy of science and technology in advancing health and healthcare practices. The modern Western belief system and its frames for global thinking that have now become powerful worldwide are succinctly characterized by an individualistic, self-determining, and rights-bearing concept of being; an epistemological framework that centers on abstract thinking, objectivity in observation, logical reasoning processes, verifiable knowledge, and a positivist version of the scientific method; and moral and political values of autonomy supportive of individual rights. Scientific and technological progress and diverse socioeconomic systems contributed to fostering great “accelerations” in the scale of production, consumption, communication, and transportation that in particular since 1945 have improved the duration and quality of life for many people.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Global HealthEthical Challenges, pp. 230 - 241Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
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