posted on 2010-02-01, 12:27authored byTim Brown, Morag Bell
In May 2004 the World Health Organization officially launched the ‘Global
Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health’. Lying at its heart is the
recognition that many of the risk factors associated with non-communicable
diseases, particularly poor diet and physical inactivity, have begun to move
beyond the confines of the West. It was this apparent shift in the
epidemiological boundaries of such diseases, along with fears over the socalled
‘double burden’ that they presented to some nations, that finally
prompted the WHO to develop such a far reaching strategy. This paper adds
to the on-going debate surrounding this important issue by drawing on the
concepts of medicalisation, governmentality and the spatiality of scientific
knowledge to explore one particular element of it: namely, the identification of
nature as a setting for the promotion of physical activity. We adopt this
perspective because we are concerned to understand the ways in which the
knowledge and practice of the new public health travels. As our analysis
reveals, in many Western nations the natural environment has emerged as an
important ‘transactional zone’ where the governmental imperative for the
production of fit and active bodies coalesces with the individual desire to be
healthy. However, while it is apparent that this physical activity discourse
increasingly operates throughout the globe, there is less evidence of an
equivalent discourse that promotes the health-related benefits of nature. We
argue that this is significant because it helps us recognise that contemporary
public health discourse has a distinct geography.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Geography and Environment
Citation
BROWN, T. and BELL, M., 2007. Off the couch and on the move: global public health and the medicalisation of nature. Social Science and Medicine, 64 (6), pp.1343-1354.