Global health and geographical imaginaries

Author(s)

    • Herrick, Clare
    • Reubi, David

Bibliographic Information

Global health and geographical imaginaries

edited by Clare Herrick and David Reubi

(Routledge studies in public health)

Routledge, 2017

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

To date, geography has not yet carved out a disciplinary niche within the diffuse domain that constitutes global health. However, the compulsion to do and understand global health emerges largely from contexts that geography has long engaged with: urbanisation, globalisation, political economy, risk, vulnerability, lifestyles, geopolitics, culture, governance, development and the environment. Moreover, global health brings with it an innate, powerful and politicising spatial logic that is only now starting to emerge as an object of enquiry. This book aims to draw attention to and showcase the wealth of existing and emergent geographical contributions to what has recently been termed 'critical global health studies'. Geographical perspectives, this collection argues, are essential to bringing new and critical perspectives to bear on the inherent complexities and interconnectedness of global health problems and purported solutions. Thus, rather than rehearsing the frequent critique that global health is more a 'set of problems' than a coherent disciplinary approach to ameliorating the health of all and redressing global bio-inequalities; this collection seeks to explore what these problems might represent and the geographical imaginaries inherent in their constitution. This unique volume of geographical writings on global health not only deepens social scientific engagements with health itself, but in so doing, brings forth a series of new conceptual, methodological and empirical contributions to social scientific, multidisciplinary scholarship.

Table of Contents

Introduction Global health and Geographical Imaginaries (Clare Herrick and David Reubi) Part I: Global health imaginaries Chapter 1. HIV, AIDS and the global Imaginary (Gerry Kearns) Chapter 2. Temporal and spacial imaginaries of global health: tobacco, non-communicable disease and modernity (David Reubi) Chapter 3. Exemplary or exceptional? the production and dismantling of global health in Botswana (Betsey Brada) Chapter 4. Mixing and fixing: managing and imagining the body in a global world (Sarah Atkinson) Part II: Global health, power and politics Chapter 5. Making ties through making drugs: partnerships for tuberculosis drug and vaccine development (Susan Craddock) Chapter 6. Living well with parasitic worms: a more-than-human geography of global health (Jamie Lorimer) Chapter 7. Resistant bodies, malaria and the question of immunity (Uli Beisel) Chapter 8. A genealogy of evidence at the WHO (Nele Jensen) Part III. When solutions make problems Chapter 9. More than one world, more than one health: re-configuring inter-species health (Stephen Hinchliffe) Chapter 11. Eat your greens, buy some chips: contesting articulations of food and food security in children's lives (Jane Battersby) Chapter 12. Structural violence, capabilities and the experiential politics of alcohol regulation (Clare Herrick)

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