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One for the Road Barron H. Lerner (Bellevue Hospital Center, Clinic 2D)

One for the Road By Barron H. Lerner (Bellevue Hospital Center, Clinic 2D)

One for the Road by Barron H. Lerner (Bellevue Hospital Center, Clinic 2D)


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Summary

Why, despite decades and decades of warnings, do people still choose to drive while intoxicated? One for the Road provides crucial historical lessons for understanding the old epidemic of drunk driving and the new epidemic of distracted driving.

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One for the Road Summary

One for the Road: Drunk Driving since 1900 by Barron H. Lerner (Bellevue Hospital Center, Clinic 2D)

Don't drink and drive. It's a deceptively simple rule, but one that is all too often ignored. And while efforts to eliminate drunk driving have been around as long as automobiles, every movement to keep drunks from driving has hit some alarming bumps in the road. Barron H. Lerner narrates the two strong-and vocal-sides to this debate in the United States: those who argue vehemently against drunk driving, and those who believe the problem is exaggerated and overregulated. A public health professor and historian of medicine, Lerner asks why these opposing views exist, examining drunk driving in the context of American beliefs about alcoholism, driving, individualism, and civil liberties. Angry and bereaved activist leaders and advocacy groups like Mothers Against Drunk Driving campaign passionately for education and legislation, but even as people continue to be killed, many Americans remain unwilling to take stronger steps to address the problem. Lerner attributes this attitude to Americans' love of drinking and love of driving, an inadequate public transportation system, the strength of the alcohol lobby, and the enduring backlash against Prohibition. The stories of people killed and maimed by drunk drivers are heartrending, and the country's routine rejection of reasonable strategies for ending drunk driving is frustratingly inexplicable. This book is a fascinating study of the culture of drunk driving, grassroots and professional efforts to stop it, and a public that has consistently challenged and tested the limits of individual freedom. Why, despite decades and decades of warnings, do people still choose to drive while intoxicated? One for the Road provides crucial historical lessons for understanding the old epidemic of drunk driving and the new epidemic of distracted driving.

One for the Road Reviews

Dr. Lerner's account of the long relationship between the automobile and the beverage-on both a corporate and a consumer level-is dogged, comprehensive and occasionally quite surprising. -- Abigail Zuger, M.D. New York Times In the libertarian society of the US, Americans acknowledge their rights, which include driving automobiles and consuming alcoholic beverages. Innocuous independently, combined they have plagued the country for over 100 years. Choice Well written and passionately argued, the text explores how Americans' historic "love of alcohol, love of driving, and more abstractly, love of freedom and individual liberties" spawned a complex, centurylong, and at times self-defeating battle with drunk drivers. -- David Blanke Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences

About Barron H. Lerner (Bellevue Hospital Center, Clinic 2D)

Barron H. Lerner is a physician, historian, and professor of medicine and public health at Columbia University. He is the author of Contagion and Confinement: Controlling Tuberculosis along the Skid Road and When Illness Goes Public, both also published by Johns Hopkins, and The Breast Cancer Wars: Hope, Fear, and the Pursuit of a Cure in Twentieth-Century America, winner of the William H. Welch Medal of the American Association for the History of Medicine and named a notable book by the American Library Association.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: What's the Harm?
1. The Discovery of Drunk Driving
2. Science and Government Enter the Fray
3. The MADD Mothers Take Charge
4. The Movement Matures and Splinters
5. Lawyers, Libertarians, and the Liquor LobbyFight Back
6. More (and More) Tragedies
Afterword
Notes
Index

Additional information

CIN1421401908G
9781421401904
1421401908
One for the Road: Drunk Driving since 1900 by Barron H. Lerner (Bellevue Hospital Center, Clinic 2D)
Used - Good
Hardback
Johns Hopkins University Press
2011-10-14
248
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - One for the Road