CfP public health in the Caribbean and Latin America: a historical perspective, University of York, 18-20 July 2014
Diffusionist models of understanding the histories of
medicine and health practices in non-European countries have increasingly been
discredited.
Instead, scholars now highlight the multi-directional
movement of ideas and practices between Europe and other parts of the world, as
well as the mutually-constitutive character of imperialism, post-colonial
ideologies and development projects. Yet, several gaps remain in the
historiography.
Relatively scant attention has been paid to the
production of medical and scientific practices in Caribbean and Latin American
contexts, and how the underpinning knowledge was used to reshape the design and
implementation of medical, scientific and public health work; this dynamism in
Latin America and the Caribbean also had a far-reaching impact on imperial
powers such as Portugal, the US, France and, not least, Britain.
This two-day workshop, centred around pre-circulated
papers, tries to fill the gap in the scholarship by examining some of the
unique public health policies that emerged in the Caribbean and Latin America
and which were deeply wedded to local conditions and influenced by negotiations
between indigenous elites and the groups they sought to control. The workshop
also seeks to better understand the ways in which models of public health
organisation and practices were exported wider afield, either through
trans-imperial networks or post-Second World War developmental strategies.
We welcome proposals for papers on any part of the
Caribbean and Latin
one of the following themes:
- The control of
tuberculosis
- Questions of
infant and maternal health
- Primary health
care, broadly defined
And which engage with one or more of the following
questions:
- The
identification of tuberculosis as a public health problem and the
measures
intended to combat the disease
- How TB control
efforts were imagined, variously, as a national,
regional and
international problem
- How
international and multilateral agencies, such as the WHO and
UNICEF, got
involved in TB control efforts
- Why was the
issue of infant and maternal health advocated as being of
national,
regional and international significance?
- What were the
core components of infant and maternal healthcare
services in
different imperial and national contexts?
- How were
experiments with social medicine interconnected with a rise
in ideologies
relating to the need for social security nets and universal
health care?
- How were
concepts of universal healthcare incorporated into political
systems, both
imperial and national?
- What roles did
international health organisations play in advocating
the need for
primary health care?
- How were
experiments in primary healthcare in Latin America and the
Caribbean
exported wider afield?
- What efforts
were made by global funding agencies, such as the World
Bank and the
International Monetary Fund, to reshape structures of primary
healthcare?
- How did
external pressures, from funding agencies and new political
alliances, cause
an expansion of public-private partnerships in health-care
delivery, and
to what effect?
We may offer a limited number of Postgraduate Bursaries
to assist postgraduate presenters with registration and UK-travel costs. Those
seeking a bursary should state so on their submission.
Proposals for papers must include the following:
- title
- summary of
proposal of maximum 250 words
affiliation
*All proposals must be sent to Dr. Henrice Altink (henrice.altink@york.ac.uk <henrice.altink@york.ac.uk>) no
later than Friday 25 January 2014*. Notifications will be sent by 25 February
2014.