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Rethinking the Paradigm and Practice of Occupational Health in a World Without Decent Work: A Perspective From East and Southern Africa

René Loewenson

2021NEW SOLUTIONS A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy14 citationsDOI

Abstract

The global political economy is generating new forms and growing shares of informal, insecure, and precarious labor, adding to histories of insecure work and an externalization of social costs. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the consequences of ignoring such signals in terms of the increased risk and vulnerability of insecure labor. This paper explores how such trends are generating intersecting adverse health outcomes for workers, communities, and environments and the implications for breaking siloes and building links between the paradigms, science, practice, and tools for occupational health, public health, and eco-health. Applying the principle of controlling hazards at the source is argued in this context to call for an understanding of the upstream production and socio-political factors that are jointly affecting the nature of work and employment and their impact on the health of workers, the public, and the planet.

Topics & Concepts

Vulnerability (computing)Work (physics)ExternalizationContext (archaeology)Public healthPerspective (graphical)PoliticsOccupational safety and healthUpstream (networking)Political sciencePandemicEconomic growthSociologyPublic relationsDevelopment economicsEconomicsMedicinePsychologyGeographyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)EngineeringSocial psychologyNursingDiseasePathologyTelecommunicationsComputer securityComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceArchaeologyMechanical engineeringInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawEmployment and Welfare StudiesGlobal Public Health Policies and EpidemiologyClimate Change and Health Impacts
Rethinking the Paradigm and Practice of Occupational Health in a World Without Decent Work: A Perspective From East and Southern Africa | Litcius