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Contesting medical treatment: lead pollution and the Karen of Klity Creek, Kanchanaburi (Thailand)

Contesting medical treatment: lead pollution and the Karen of Klity Creek, Kanchanaburi (Thailand)
Contesting medical treatment: lead pollution and the Karen of Klity Creek, Kanchanaburi (Thailand)
Since the mid-1970s the forested area of Klity Creek, northwest of Bangkok, suffered from one of the worst cases of industrial pollution in Thailand caused by a floating lead mine that operated in the area. Toxic waste found its way into the stream, used for daily food and water consumption by the local (Pwo-) speaking Karen villagers. After an NGO came to their aid, introducing the Karen villagers to the environmental justice movement of Thailand, the villagers came to seek redress. They demanded pharmacological intervention from the Ministry of Public Health. The intervention they received was "health surveillance," which led them to reject the treatment offered. This article focuses on the protest as well as the gap between medical intervention and the experiential needs of people suffering from environmental illness as well as the role of civic activism in framing the issue of illness.
81-92
Porath, Nathan
3ec6e51c-ceb8-46e2-8fd0-71a416f0f095
Malee Sithhikriengkrai
Porath, Nathan
3ec6e51c-ceb8-46e2-8fd0-71a416f0f095

Porath, Nathan , Malee Sithhikriengkrai (2018) Contesting medical treatment: lead pollution and the Karen of Klity Creek, Kanchanaburi (Thailand). Anthropos, 113 (1), 81-92. (doi:10.5771/0257-9774-2018-1-81).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Since the mid-1970s the forested area of Klity Creek, northwest of Bangkok, suffered from one of the worst cases of industrial pollution in Thailand caused by a floating lead mine that operated in the area. Toxic waste found its way into the stream, used for daily food and water consumption by the local (Pwo-) speaking Karen villagers. After an NGO came to their aid, introducing the Karen villagers to the environmental justice movement of Thailand, the villagers came to seek redress. They demanded pharmacological intervention from the Ministry of Public Health. The intervention they received was "health surveillance," which led them to reject the treatment offered. This article focuses on the protest as well as the gap between medical intervention and the experiential needs of people suffering from environmental illness as well as the role of civic activism in framing the issue of illness.

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Published date: 1 January 2018

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Local EPrints ID: 439272
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/439272
PURE UUID: 9cd9ed40-7a07-4151-ba90-f8609c701fbf

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Date deposited: 07 Apr 2020 16:32
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:26

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Contributors

Author: Nathan Porath
Corporate Author: Malee Sithhikriengkrai

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