Acts of public defiance towards biomedical public health policies have occurred throughout modern history, from resistance to early smallpox vaccines in 19th-century Britain and America to more recent intransigence to efforts to contain the Ebola outbreak in Central and West Africa. Thinking through Resistance examines a diverse range of case studies of opposition to biomedical public health policies – from resistance to HPV vaccinations in Texas to disputes over HIV prevention research in Malawi – to assess the root causes of opposition. It is argued that far from being based on ignorance, resistance instead serves as a form of advocacy, calling for improvements in basic health-care delivery alongside expanded access to infrastructure and basic social services. Building on this argument, the authors set out an alternative to the current technocratic approach to global public health, extending beyond greater distribution of medical technologies to build on the perspectives of a political economy of health.With contributions from medical anthropologists, sociologists, and public health experts, Thinking through Resistance makes important reading for researchers, students, and practitioners in the fields of public health, medical anthropology, and public policy.
Les mer
List of Contributors1 Introduction: Thinking through resistanceNicola Bulled and Matthew Puffer2 Subaltern Resistance Narratives and the Culture-Centered Approach: Inverting Public Health Discourse Mohan J. Dutta and Ambar Basu3 "Protecting Life": The case of Texas legislation and Resistances to Gardasil, the HPV VaccineSamantha D. Gottlieb4 Resistance or Parasitism?: Waste Scavengers and Dengue Mosquito Control in NicaraguaAlex M. Nading5 When New Science Meets Old Traditions: Engaging the Indigenous Sector to Improve Uptake of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision for HIV Prevention in High-Prevalence CountriesNicola Bulled and Edward C. Green6 Saying no to PrEP Research in Malawi: What Constitutes ‘Failure’ in Offshored HIV Prevention Research?Kristin Peterson, Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan, Edward Chigwedere, and Evaristo Nthete7 Oral Health as a Citizen-Making Project: Immigrant Parents’ Contestations of Dental Public Health Campaigns Sarah Horton and Judith Barker8 Drug Patents and Shit Politics in South Africa: Refiguring the Politics of the ‘Scientific’ and the ‘Global’ in Global Health InterventionsChristopher J. Colvin and Steven RobinsIndex
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781629583358
Publisert
2017-03-03
Utgiver
Vendor
Left Coast Press Inc
Vekt
226 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
G, U, 01, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
144

Redaktør

Om bidragsyterne

Nicola Bulled is a medical anthropologist at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA. Her research explores the relationships between society and biomedical technologies for improved global health delivery.