International Journal of Health Services 2000-01-01

Agricultural "killing fields": the poisoning of Costa Rican banana workers.

R Sass

Index: Int. J. Health Serv. 30(3) , 491-514, (2000)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

The poisoning of Costa Rican banana workers by multinational corporations' excessive use of pesticides is not a local issue; it is embedded in a dominant ideology expressed by the phenomenon of globalization. This ideology seeps into every aspect of our social institutions--economic, political, and legal. The practice of this ideological perspective is evident in the industrialization of global agriculture and the shift from "developmentalism"--liberal welfarism, industrialization, and urbanization--to a dominant, undemocratic, global financial elite with "economism" and a neoliberal political agenda overriding the nation-state polis. A specific effect is to transform the agricultural workers of developing countries, such as Costa Rican banana workers, into politically superfluous flesh-and-blood human beings.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Adsorption of halogenated aliphatic contaminants by graphene nanomaterials.

2015-08-01

[Water Res. 79 , 57-67, (2015)]

An evaluation of the occupational health risks to workers in a hazardous waste incinerator.

2004-03-01

[J. Occup. Health 46(2) , 156-64, (2004)]

Critical evaluation of the cancer risk of dibromochloropropane (DBCP).

2005-01-01

[J. Environ. Sci. Health. C. Environ. Carcinog. Ecotoxicol. Rev. 23(2) , 215-60, (2005)]

Mutation spectrum of 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane, an endocrine disruptor, in the lacI transgenic Big Blue Rat2 fibroblast cell line.

2002-07-01

[Mutagenesis 17(4) , 301-7, (2002)]

Effects of metronidazole, ipronidazole, and dibromochloropropane on rabbit and human sperm motility and fertility.

2002-01-01

[Reprod. Toxicol. 16(6) , 749-55, (2002)]

More Articles...