Physiologie du risque face à l’Histoire, or, Health, Culture and Society: The possibilities of anthropology and policy

Auteurs-es

  • Bernard Jouanjean College de France

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.5195/hcs.2011.65

Mots-clés :

Physiology, Anthropology, System building

Résumé

This review of published research (Health, Culture and Society – Rawat Publications, India, 2000) seeks to introduce the reader to the driving themes of a work establishing the link between human physiological functions and social represetations. In doing so the author articulates the topic of prevention within a broad and complex social, historical and anthropological framework.

Biographie de l'auteur-e

Bernard Jouanjean, College de France

Dr. Bernard Jouanjean, is a member of the College de France specializing in prevention, and of late, health system strategization. Awarded his docterate in 1975 (Paris), Dr. Jouanjean has specialized in tropical pathology; public health; the epidemology of nutrition; molecular biology and prevention. He has presented and published extensively on the systematization of health, most recently focusing on the Indian tradition and the possibilities of a quadrapartite structuration of professions and functions.

Références

Jouanjean, B. Physiologie du risque face à l’Histoire, Coll. Ethique § Pratiques Médicales, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2009.

Jouanjean, B. Health, Culture and Society, A Comparative Analysis of French, Chinese and Indian Society, Rawat Publications, 2011.

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Publié-e

2011-10-12

Numéro

Rubrique

Invited Articles