Power, Politics, and the Framing of Environmental Illness
In: Sociological inquiry: the quarterly journal of the International Sociology Honor Society, Volume 68, Issue 4, p. 458-475
Abstract
The medical community, along with other government agencies, has created its own frame of environmental illness. This frame has been generally accepted by the American public. In this paper we discuss framing in general and the factors related to how the environmental illness frame has been constructed and maintained. We offer a brief history of the medical institution and illustrate the frame with its definitions of environmental illness. Qualitative data from a study of Oak Ridge, a contaminated community located in Tennessee, are examined to analyze the consequences of challenging the environmental illness frame. Implications for future research are discussed.
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