Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- List of abbreviations
- About the author
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- one Introduction
- two Defining social harm
- three Capitalist formations and the production of harm
- four Harm reduction regimes and the production of physical harm
- five Harm reduction regimes and the production of autonomy and relational harms
- six Harm reduction regimes, neoliberalism and the production of harm
- References
- Index
Foreword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 March 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- List of abbreviations
- About the author
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- one Introduction
- two Defining social harm
- three Capitalist formations and the production of harm
- four Harm reduction regimes and the production of physical harm
- five Harm reduction regimes and the production of autonomy and relational harms
- six Harm reduction regimes, neoliberalism and the production of harm
- References
- Index
Summary
Each year and worldwide, millions of adults and children are killed or experience death, and many more are hurt or injured, from causes that are entirely preventable. For example, the most recent estimates reveal that close to 7 million children under 5 years of age died from diseases such as pneumonia, diarrhoea and malaria or due to pre-birth or intrapartum complications; 1.2 million people died on the world’s roads; there were almost half a million deaths as a result of intentional homicide across the world; and there were 378,000 global war deaths annually between 1985 and 1994.
The general tendency of academic researchers has been to address the nature and causes of such harms, and their remedies, from within distinct and separate disciplines – primarily, social epidemiology, social policy, criminology and development studies. The nature of academic disciplinary boundaries is such that interdisciplinary, and multidisciplinary, approaches are rarely applied to the analyses of such harms.
The social harm approach, with its recent origins in the publication Beyond criminology: Taking harm seriously, by Paddy Hillyard and others in 2004, sought to remedy this academic lacuna. Written as a critique of criminology, the authors sought to problematise the basis on which a distinct number of harms came to be seen as crimes and dealt with through an expensive, ineffective and ultimately socially harmful criminal justice system. At the same time they drew attention to other (potentially more harmful) events and situations that failed to attract the crime label, and therefore, the same level of social opprobrium. Their response was to call for a new social harm approach (or zemiological approach, taken from the Greek word zemia, meaning harm) which would encompass a typology of social harms, irrespective of legal categorisation, and which could be responded to through progressive and democratic social policies.
The book series Studies in Social Harm seeks to offer a contribution to the disciplinary agenda of zemiology by encouraging fresh thinking on the nature of, and responses to, serious harms afflicting individuals and communities, both nationally and globally. It aims to provide intellectual (both in terms of theoretical and empirical) coherence to the study of social harms, drawing on interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary and different and innovative methodological approaches.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Harmful SocietiesUnderstanding Social Harm, pp. xi - xivPublisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2015