Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick

Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick

Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick

Britain, 1800–1854
Christopher Hamlin, University of Notre Dame, Indiana
January 2009
Available
Paperback
9780521102117
$66.00
USD
Paperback
USD
Hardback

    The 1830s and 1840s are the formative years of modern public health in Britain, when the poor law bureaucrat Edwin Chadwick conceived his vision of public health through public works and began the campaign for the construction of the kinds of water and sewage works that ultimately became the standard components of urban infrastructure throughout the developed world. This book first explores that vision and campaign against the backdrop of the great 'condition-of-England' questions of the period, of what rights and expectations working people could justifiably have in regard to political participation, food, shelter and conditions of work. It examines the ways Chadwick's sanitarianism fitted the political needs of the much-hated Poor Law Commission and of Whig and Tory governments, each seeking some antidote to revolutionary Chartism. It then reviews the Chadwickians' efforts to solve the host of problems they met in trying to implement the sanitary idea: of what responsibilities central and local units of government, and private contractors, were to have; of how townspeople could be persuaded to embark on untried public technologies; of where the new public health experts were to come from; and of how elegant technical designs were to be fitted to the unique social, political, and geographic circumstances of individual towns.

    • First book to provide a thematic analysis of the structure and arguments of Edwin Chadwick's famous Sanitary Report of 1842
    • First to use 'Local Reports' published by Sanitary Report, inspectors' reports of General Board of Health and Poor Law Commission archives
    • Explores the possibility that a political medicine might have emerged as a counterweight to political economy

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Christopher Hamlin's overlooked but fascinating Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick: Britain, 1800-1854 explores a period often considered the golden age of public health, and provides some perspective on the politics surrounding the sanitarian campaign." The New York Review

    "In my view, his purpose in this well-researched and written book is admirable. He contributes an important reassessment to the history of a central period of British public health, one which is still widely cited on the international as well as the national stage. He opens up important dimensions to the 'politics of expertise' and to the rise of science as an apparent neutral authority in policy making. He also reminds contemporary public health practitioners that the debates of the mid-nineteenth century represent a set of choices reflecting profound and permanent questions which still need, or ought, to be confronted." The Journal of Modern History

    "Christopher Hamlin's Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick is a welcome new look at the manner in which mid-nineteenth-century cities in Great Britain perceived and acted upon the unhealthy conditions that prevailed in them. Public Health and Social Justice in the Age of Chadwick should be read by historians of technology, the city, and public policy on both sides of the Atlantic. Hamlin succeeds triumphantly in demonstrating the complex history of public health in nineteenth-century British cities. Moreover, he places this subject in its dynamic political, economic, administrative and intellectual climate." Joanne Abel Goldman, John Hopkins University Press

    "Hamlin's scrupulous examination of Edwin Chadwick's sanitation campaign attacks the determinist idea that Victorians constructed sewers and water supply systems as a direct and obvious response to pollution-induced disease....well worth studying. The book succeeds as history, as social commentary, as a treatise on sanitation, and even as intellectual biography." Dale H. Porter, Journal of Interdisciplinary History

    "[Hamlin] brings to the topic new analytical tools which he uses to reinterpret well-worked sources, and this in turn poens up new sources and issues. Hamlin crafts all this into an engaging narrative that all historians will read with profit." Canadian Journal of History

    "Christopher Hamlin's book offers some new information, but its main claim to attention is a fresh interpretation. The book is well organized and written in lively prose. It is an argumentative account that makes some sweeping assertions and invites debate. In short, it is engaging and stimulating. It has the considerable merit of demonstrating that we need to know more about early Victorians other than Chadwick: those who came to similar policy solutions from different premises, and those urban reformers who proved to be Chadwick's most important allies." Bulletin of the History of Medicine

    "...a major contribution to the history's of public health." Anne Crother, American Historical Review

    "engagingly written new book...There is much in this argument which persuades. The subject is a major one and the skills deployed in recreating the full dimensions of the debate which Chadwick "won" are impressive, especially so in the author's location and analysis of medically related literature." Victorian Studies

    See more reviews

    Product details

    January 2009
    Paperback
    9780521102117
    380 pages
    229 × 152 × 21 mm
    0.56kg
    7 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. Health as Money
    • 2. A Political Medicine
    • 3. Prelude to the Sanitary Report, 1833–1838
    • 4. The Making of the Sanitary Report, 1839–1842
    • 5. The Sanitary Report
    • 6. Chadwick's Evidence: The Local Reports
    • 7. Sanitation Triumphant: The Health of Towns Commission, 1843–1845
    • 8. The Politics of Public Health, 1841–1848
    • 9. Selling Sanitation: the Inspectors and the Local Authorities, 1848-1854
    • 10. Lost in the Pipes
    • Conclusion
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Christopher Hamlin , University of Notre Dame, Indiana