CALL FOR
PAPERS:
CONFERENCE: SETTING AN ETHICAL AGENDA
FOR HEALTH PROMOTION
18-20 September 2007,
The promotion of health, both as a methodology and as a policy, has always been partly an ethical project. The past few decades the policy makers’ attention has not only been attracted by data regarding morbidity and mortality, but just as much by health inequalities. Therefore, reducing health disparities and assuring people the right to the highest attainable standard of health is nowadays considered as an absolute priority by local, national and supranational institutions.
Despite these ethical motivations the
domain of health promotion practice is littered with ethical pitfalls: victim
blaming, paternalism, healthism, imposing a conception of ‘the good life’,
coercion, the use of marketing strategies, lack of consent, etc.
This conference intends to bring together scholars from both the fields of ethics and health promotion in order to identify and to examine the ethical issues that are at stake within the context of health promotion.
Confirmed keynotes: Norman Daniels
(Harvard), David McQueen (CDC & IUPHE), Nancy Kass (Johns Hopkins), Angus Dawson
(Keele), Marcel Verweij (