The 131st Annual Meeting (November 15-19, 2003) of APHA

The 131st Annual Meeting (November 15-19, 2003) of APHA

4196.0: Tuesday, November 18, 2003 - 3:30 PM

Abstract #71189

Science and Politics in California Environmental Policy: The Neglected Role of Public Health

Bruce Jennings, PhD, Senate Committee on Environmental Quality, California Legislature, 1305 Kaiser Road, SW, Olympia, WA 98512, 360-866-4593, Bruce.Jennings@sen.ca.gov

This presentation examines some of the contemporary political controversies involving environmental policy in California with the objective of defining a broader political agenda for public health advocates in the twenty-first century. Since the mid-1980s California has pursued a regulatory regime in which certain lines of scientific inquiry play an increasingly crucial role in defining the direction of the State’s policy, while other kinds of knowledge are neglected or more actively suppressed. Viewing California’s policy choices from a perspective of dominant fields of inquiry versus neglected kinds of knowledge represents an alternative vantage on the landscape of policy choices in Sacramento, Washington, D. C. and beyond. This alternative perspective recognizes that the current dominance of certain forms of scientific inquiry in environmental policy might be constructively engaged in the California Legislature by those scientists, e.g., public health professionals, who currently provide only a subordinate role in the State’s environmental policy process.

Learning Objectives:

Keywords: Environmental Health, Public Health Policy

Presenting author's disclosure statement:
I do not have any significant financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with any organization/institution whose products or services are being discussed in this session.

Environmental Health and Policy: The politics of science

The 131st Annual Meeting (November 15-19, 2003) of APHA