The Personal Is Scientific,the Scientific Is Political: The Public Paradigm of the Environmental Breast Cancer Movement |
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Authors: | McCormick Sabrina Brown Phil Zavestoski Stephen |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology, Brown University, Box 1916, Providence, Rhode Island, 02912;(2) Department of Sociology, University of San Francisco, San Francisco, California, 94117-1080 |
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Abstract: | This paper introduces the concept of boundary movements to characterize the distinctive growth and strategies of movements involving citizen/science alliances to contend with environmentally related illnesses. This concept is applied to a case study of the environmental breast cancer movement, which has induced changes in treatment options and public perception of breast cancer. Since the early 1990s, a segment of this movement has consistently criticized the traditional paradigms governing research, the epistemology of breast cancer, and popular understandings. Against the traditional focus on genetics, lifestyles, and personal responsibility, this segment's broader messages stress environmental causation and women's participation in science and politics. |
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Keywords: | social movements environment health boundary movement |
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