This paper argues that critical public health should reengage with public health as practice by drawing on versions of Science and Technology Studies (STS) that ‘de-centre the human’ and by seeking alternative forms of critique to work inspired by Foucault. Based on close reading of work by Annemarie Mol, John Law, Vicky Singleton and others, I demonstrate that these authors pursue a conversation with Foucault but suggest new approaches to studying contemporary public health work in different settings. Proposing that we ‘doubt’ both the unity of public health and its effects, I argue that this version of STS opens up a space to recognise multiplicity; to avoid idealising what is being criticised; and to celebrate or care for public health p...
On the 5th of May 2020, a group of modellers, epidemiologists and biomedical scientists from the Uni...
On the 5th of May 2020, a group of modellers, epidemiologists and biomedical scientists from the Uni...
This paper will argue that the UK has seen several phases of public health improvement since the Ind...
The \u27posthumanist turn\u27 in critical theory comprises efforts to recognize and analyze the inte...
The notion of ‘precision’ public health has been the subject of much debate, with recent articles co...
The two central tenets proposed by Hanlon and his co-authors Carlisle, Hannah, Lyon and Reilly that ...
Debates about appropriate methodologies for studying public health problems have tended to be polari...
This open access book bridges the divide between political science and public health, whilst simulta...
Critical thinking in public health is well and alive, ad least by looking at the numbers and content...
A recent CPH editorial addressed ‘the perils of invoking neoliberalism in public health critique’. W...
The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply impacted all aspects of life in Canada, revealing systemic racism a...
It seems to be the fate of public health as concept, movement, and reality to veer between political...
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the significance of the politics of health as an ongoing inter...
Public health research is overtly orientated towards influencing policy and yet, despite official co...
Health inequalities research has shown a growing interest in participatory ways of working. However,...
On the 5th of May 2020, a group of modellers, epidemiologists and biomedical scientists from the Uni...
On the 5th of May 2020, a group of modellers, epidemiologists and biomedical scientists from the Uni...
This paper will argue that the UK has seen several phases of public health improvement since the Ind...
The \u27posthumanist turn\u27 in critical theory comprises efforts to recognize and analyze the inte...
The notion of ‘precision’ public health has been the subject of much debate, with recent articles co...
The two central tenets proposed by Hanlon and his co-authors Carlisle, Hannah, Lyon and Reilly that ...
Debates about appropriate methodologies for studying public health problems have tended to be polari...
This open access book bridges the divide between political science and public health, whilst simulta...
Critical thinking in public health is well and alive, ad least by looking at the numbers and content...
A recent CPH editorial addressed ‘the perils of invoking neoliberalism in public health critique’. W...
The COVID-19 pandemic has deeply impacted all aspects of life in Canada, revealing systemic racism a...
It seems to be the fate of public health as concept, movement, and reality to veer between political...
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the significance of the politics of health as an ongoing inter...
Public health research is overtly orientated towards influencing policy and yet, despite official co...
Health inequalities research has shown a growing interest in participatory ways of working. However,...
On the 5th of May 2020, a group of modellers, epidemiologists and biomedical scientists from the Uni...
On the 5th of May 2020, a group of modellers, epidemiologists and biomedical scientists from the Uni...
This paper will argue that the UK has seen several phases of public health improvement since the Ind...