The Dictionary of Human Geography

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to lose our bearings, it disturbs and destabilizes,
he argued, precisely because it exceeds our
experience or comprehension of the world.
Viewed in this way, accounting for the dis-
astrous dimensions of hazards calls for some-
thing more than simply the extension of our
rational understanding of causes and conse-
quences. It invites us to contemplate the limits
of our knowledge and how we might respond
intellectually, politically and ethically, to such
limits. The terrorist attacks of 11 September
2001 prompted Judith Butler to reconsider
the precariousness of human life, and to
muse on ‘the emergence and vanishing of the
human at the limits of what we can know’
(2004, p. 151). For her, such a disaster impels
us to reassess the way we address others who
have suffered, and to think deeply about the
role of loss and mourning in modern life
(seeethics). This is not to make light of
the achievements of apprehending hazard as
socially constructed, but it is a reminder to
think also about the capacity of hazards to
shape and define our human condition, and
to raise questions about the limits of knowing,
writing about and ordering the volatile worlds
that we inhabit. nhc

Suggested reading
Blaikie, Cannon, Davis and Wisner (1994); Emel
and Peet (1989); Mustafa (2005); Pelling
(2001).

health and health care ‘The concept of
‘‘health’’ is open to differing interpretations’
(Curtis, 2004, p. 2). It can mean ‘the presence
or absence of diagnosed diseases’, but also
many different dimensions potentially contrib-
uting to the corporeal, emotional and social
well-being of people in their everyday lives.
Gesler and Kearns (2002, pp. 30–2) discuss
‘cultures of health’, identifying the explana-
tory models deployed by different people
(e.g. expertscontralay people) and drawing
inspiration from ‘ethnomedicine’ as the study
of how such models (and their deeper
cultural, religious, cosmological moorings)
vary from place to place. Additionally,
assumptions about health clearly vary within
places according toclass,ethnicity,gender
and other markers of social difference (Lewis,
Dyck and McLafferty, 2001).
Acknowledging such variability in health
beliefs suggests an approach to ageography
ofhealth that squares with recent shifts in the
sub-discipline of medical geography. In-
deed, some argue that medical geography
should be widened to include not just health

defined through the lenses of Western bio-
medicine, casting health in the negative sense
ofnotbeing physically or mentally ‘ill’, but
rather in the broader sense indicated above,
of health as well-being. This orientation de-
mands a holistic focus on the great variability
of the human condition, commonly at the
scaleof populations within territories, but in
principle also at that of individual people
interacting with quite specific sites. One up-
shot is then the enlarging of what is meant by
risk, with geographers addressing the many
risks to health that people face from infectious
illnessesbutalso from the likes ofenviron-
mental hazards, interpersonalviolenceand
occupational stress, all of which constitute
multiple ‘spaces of risk’ figuring in domains
of humandecision-makingfrom thestate
to thehousehold(Curtis, 2004, pp. 5–9).
A link exists here to a long-standing geo-
graphical concern for human well-being,
sometimes configured asquality of life,in
which a political commitment to uncovering
spatialinjustice is never far below the surface.
This concern awakened in the 1970s with the
contribution ofwelfare geography, and has
continued into more recent work on the socio-
spatial constitution of ‘health inequalities’.
A key development has been Gesler’s (1992)
notion of ‘therapeuticlandscapes’, highlight-
ing how places in all of their complexity can
foster people’s senses of healthfulwell-being,
and Curtis (2004, ch. 2) mobilizes this notion
when fashioning new perspectives on the
meeting-grounds of ‘healthandinequality’.
Another link exists to the various currents
now coalescing under the heading ofemo-
tional geographies, wherein varying human
mind–bodyassemblages(see also Butler and
Parr, 1999) are examined for how they are
constituted, enacted, experienced, re-presented
and perhaps politicized in relation to diverse
spaces,places, environments and landscapes.
Work in this vein asks about what might com-
prise places conducive to, or alternatively
destructive of, ‘emotional health’.
These new trajectories complicate what is
meant by healthcare,since such care can
no longerbe envisaged solely as providing
medical facilities of varying kinds (hospitals,
clinics, GP surgeries or even conventional
medical outreach and educational services).
Geographers have long studied these medical
facilities (seemedical geography), but they
have now begun to consider less overtly med-
icalized versions of care (Parr, 2003) – elder,
hospice and terminal care (Brown, 2003);
complementary and alternative medicines

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HEALTH AND HEALTH CARE
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