Fr. 36.50

Philosophy for Public Health and Public Policy - Beyond the Neglectful State

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This groundbreaking book argues that philosophy is not just useful, but vital, for thinking coherently about priorities in health policy and public policy.

List of contents










  • 1: Introduction

  • Part I: Philosophy for Public Policy

  • 2: Evidence, Mechanisms and Complexity

  • 3: Internal and External Validity in Ethical Reasoning

  • 4: Ethics for Complex Systems

  • Part II: Beyond the Neglectful State: an Ethical Framework for Public Health

  • 5: Paternalism, Autonomy and the Common Good: Infringing liberty for the Sake of Health

  • 6: The Right to Public Health

  • 7: Which Risks to Health Matter Most?

  • Part III: Structural Justice

  • 8: Responsibility

  • 9: Measuring and Combatting Health Related Inequalities

  • 10: Communicable Disease

  • 11: Conclusion



About the author

James Wilson is Professor of Philosophy at UCL, where he is also co-director of the Health Humanities Centre. He has been at UCL since 2008, with a secondment to the Royal Society as a Senior Policy Adviser in 2011-12. His research uses philosophy to help resolve practical problems, and also uses practical problems to investigate gaps and weaknesses in existing philosophical theories. He has published widely on public health ethics and health policy, and also on the ownership and governance of ideas and information. Among other advisory roles, he is a member of the National Data Guardian's Panel.

Summary

Public health has never been more important, or more controversial. What states do, and fail to do, makes a significant difference to the lives we are able to lead. Putting public health first would allow improvements to the health of everyone, especially the worst off. Yet many citizens actively oppose state interference to improve population health, complaining that it encroaches on personal liberty. How should policymakers reconcile these conflicting priorities?

This groundbreaking book argues that philosophy is not just useful, but vital, for thinking coherently about priorities in health policy and public policy. Novel, theoretically rigorous, yet practical, Philosophy for Public Health and Public Policy examines why it is so common for public policies to fail in practice to improve the problems they aim to solve, and what to do about this. It argues that a shift to complex systems approaches to policymaking is overdue. Philosophers need to become much more attuned to the contingency and messiness of real-world policymaking, and to the ways in which philosophical tools such as thought experiments are frequently unreliable.

The book also provides an ethical framework for public health policy. It argues that public health is a right of citizens, alongside more familiar rights such as liberty and security. Public health should not be thought of merely as interference with the rights that individuals have, but as necessary to protect these rights. Chapters explore implications for resource allocation, personal responsibility, health equity, and the control of communicable disease.

Additional text

an important, well-argued, and well-written book… Agree with him or not that there is a right to public health, and that we need to evolve our methods and methodology of reasoning in applied political philosophy, this book will keep you thinking about the ideas presented therein long after you've finished it. I'm confident that Wilson's book will become a touchstone in public health ethics for years to come.

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