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Angela Vergara

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Occupational Health and the Study of Labour 'Decent Work, Safe Work.' 'The right to life is the most fundamental right. ... The U.S. historiography ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Angela Vergara


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Occupational Health and the Study of Labour
  • Angela Vergara
  • Department of History
  • California State University, Los Angeles

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Decent Work, Safe Work.
  • The right to life is the most fundamental right.
    Yet every year 1,2 million as if 1999 2,2
    million according to 2005 figures men and women
    are deprived of that right by occupational
    accidents and work-related diseases. By
    conservative estimates workers suffer 250 million
    as of 1999 270 million according to 2005
    figures occupational accidents and 160 million
    according to both 1999 and 2005 figures
    occupational diseases each year. Deaths and
    injuries take a particularly heavy toll in
    developing countries, where large numbers of
    workers are concentrated in primary and
    extractive activities such as agriculture,
    logging, fishing and mining some of the most
    hazardous industries. (Juan Somavia, Director of
    the ILO)

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Importance
  • Health and safety as integral part of workers
    experiences.
  • Understanding of the relationship between state,
    labor and capital.
  • Ongoing struggles.

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Scholarship
  • Despite its importance and centrality, little has
    been done (maybe with the exception of the UK)
  • Addressed by different fields and perspectives.
  • Environmental studies.
  • Labor studies
  • Historians of medicine and science.
  • Gender scholars.
  • Multidisciplinary

10
The U.S. historiography
  • Beginning in the mid-1980s, an effort to
    acknowledge the critical influence of health and
    safety on workers quality of life.
  • The work of David Rosner and Gerald Markowitz
    we begin with the premise that the exploitation
    of labor is measured not only in long hours of
    work and lost dollars but also in shortened
    lives, high disease rates, and painful injuries
    (Dying for Work)

11
Different Approaches (U.S.)
  • Historians of medicine and science the role of
    doctors and scientists, technical studies,
    emphasis on the laboratories and hospitals.
  • Emergence of protective legislation laws, the
    role of the federal state and state governments,
    public health issues, strong focus on
    turn-of-the-century and the Progressive Era.
  • Case studies documenting emblematic histories
    such as coal, asbestos or radium.
  • Documenting workers experiences and
    perspectives. Ex The Navajo People and Uranium
    Mining
  • Gender the different experiences of men and
    women.
  • Studies on migration and the U.S.- Mexican border
    have discussed the use of medical exams to create
    a healthy labor force.

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Africa and Beyond
  • Randall Packard study on tuberculosis among South
    African miners.
  • He has placed the study of diseases within a
    political and economic framework.
  • The relationship between disease and employers
    labor needs.
  • The European scholarship important work in the
    UK (many collaborative project), Spain (mining,
    accidents, disability).

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Latin America
  • Despite its importance and a history of struggle
    and public efforts to enforce legislation, only a
    few studies.
  • Scholars of medicine (a growing field) have
    focused more on questions of public health and
    epidemics than on occupational diseases.
  • New environmental studies have looked at the
    impact of capital on the environment and ignored
    workers.
  • Labor scholars have paid little attention, and
    usually questions of health are mentioned as part
    of larger descriptions of working conditions.
  • School of social epidemiology (Jaime Breilh)
  • Aviva Chomsky on the health policies implemented
    by UFCO in Costa Rica, and Steve Marquadt on
    pesticides .

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Questions / Future Research
  • Incorporate workers voices, experiences and
    perspectives.
  • The role of safety on class/group solidarity,
    consciousness and activism (suggested by Reis).
  • To bring the community back.

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From a transnational and/or comparative
perspective
  • Concept of global industries and the need to
    compare different industries in different
    countries. The example of Jock McCulloch and his
    study on asbestos mining in Canada, South Africa
    and Australia.
  • Similar state responses a pattern in the
    legislation (compensation, protection,
    responsibility).
  • Transnational solidarity.
  • Companies accountability local and
    international (the case of Dole in Nicaragua).

16
Sources
  • State documentations ministry of labor, labor
    inspectors reports, ministry of health, social
    security office, national congress (when debating
    laws).
  • Labor unions publications, demands, collective
    contract, newspapers.
  • Medical doctors ministry of health, medical
    journals, memoirs, hospital records.
  • Company records description of prevention
    programs.
  • International organizations ILO, WHO (and its
    regional offices).
  • Statistics ?
  • Workers oral history.
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