Exposing Environmental Health Deception as a Government Whistleblower: turning 
critical ethnography into public pedagogy


 
http://www.wwwords.co.uk/pfie/content/pdfs/8/issue8_1.asp
 
BRIAN McKENNA Department of Behavioral Sciences, University of Michigan 
Dearborn, USA

http://www.wwwords.co.uk/pfie/content/pdfs/8/issue8_1.asp
 
BRIAN McKENNA Department of Behavioral Sciences, University of Michigan 
Dearborn, USA


 




This article focuses on the author’s applied anthropological work with the 
Ingham County Health Department between 1998 and 2001. Government 
administrators were reflexively aware that nobody had ever stepped back to 
assess the area’s overall environmental health and rank the issues according to 
some criteria, such as by the ‘most urgent problems’, and then help resolve 
them. They requested a holistic analysis. The author, an anthropologist, was 
hired to investigate virtually all of the environmental health problems in the 
region. This initiative, as originally conceived, was envisioned as a challenge 
to traditional ways of doing business at the Environmental Health Bureau of the 
Health Department. The Health Department leadership explicitly sought to create 
a model that turned the ‘public’s health into the ‘People’s Health’. 
Paradoxically, after several disturbing findings became apparent, Health 
Department officials began to work diligently to prevent the impending 
publication of the first report, ‘The Story of Water Resources at Work’ in 
August 2000. The article describes how the author used the methodology of 
critical ethnography to chronicle the processes of hegemony in the work 
environment, and how he acted as a critical public pedagogue by employing 
extant cultural forms to communicate these corruptions to citizens at large. In 
so doing it charts the surprising contingencies that resulted from his 
resistance.



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