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Health Education Research, Vol. 17, No. 1, 1-5, February 2002
© 2002 Oxford University Press


EDITORIAL

Reveille for Radicals! The paramount purpose of health education?

Keith Tones, UK Editor

In 1993, I was moved to write an Editorial on `Radicalism in health promotion' (Tones, 1993Go). This inclination was triggered by an item provided by the International People's Health Council (IPHC) which appeared in the News section of that same issue. Its analysis of health and inequity provides a challenge for health education.

The policies of today's dominant power structures—tied as they are to powerful economic interests—have done much to precipitate and worsen humanity's present social, economic, environmental and health crisis. Those who prosper from unfair social structures are resistant to change. They also have vast power and global reach. So today, changes leading toward a healthier world order must be spearheaded through a world-wide grassroots movement that is strong and well-coordinated enough so it can force the dominant power structures to listen and finally to yield. (p. 297)

Since that time, WHO and other key institutions and individuals . . . [Full Text of this Article]


    Defining health education
 

    Limitations of an `educational model': the need for critical health education
 

    Strategies for action
 
Critical consciousness raising
Health skills and action competences
Media advocacy

    Dilemmas and paradoxes and the conditions for learning
 

    Critical research and evaluation
 

    References
 

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