首页> 外文学位 >Colonialism, cross-border movements, and epidemiology: A history of public health in the Manica region of central Mozambique and eastern Zimbabwe and the African response, 1890--1980.
【24h】

Colonialism, cross-border movements, and epidemiology: A history of public health in the Manica region of central Mozambique and eastern Zimbabwe and the African response, 1890--1980.

机译:殖民主义,跨界运动和流行病学:莫桑比克中部和津巴布韦东部的马尼卡地区的公共卫生史以及非洲的反应,1890--1980年。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

This dissertation addresses one of the reasons for the lack of confidence in public health in Southern Africa. It examines the impact of intrusive colonial public health measures and colonial attempts to suppress indigenous healing practices in the Manica region. The dissertation asks whether invasive colonial public health interventions had unintended consequences, such as the continued existence of traditional medicine and the reluctance to accept biomedical arguments on the epidemiology of infectious and communicable diseases.;While these intrusive colonial public health measures were constant and pervasive, they were not always effective, partly due to the border that colonialism created. The epidemiology of the Manica region is fundamentally affected by cross-border movements, which not only spread infections, but altered disease ecologies, complicating disease control efforts. Colonial efforts to monitor movements led to the disruption of life and caused much hardship to villagers and townsfolk.;Reflecting the dynamism of African societies, this dissertation argues that while Africans tended to dislike intrusive and discriminatory preventative public health policies, they were willing to experiment with new ideas, particularly treatment services. They were discouraged, however, by the failure of colonial governments to provide adequate treatment-based services for Africans, proving that the provision of health services for Africans was driven by European settler fears of infection and economic imperatives rather than the concern for Africans. However, most of these settler fears stemmed from misunderstandings of epidemiology, and were often grossly exaggerated and racist. Regardless of whether these theories were accurate or not, they still caused hardship.;Although this project looks at the history of public health before the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Southern Africa, the legacy of colonial public health policies affects how people in Southern Africa comprehend this disease. Through the use of archival materials and oral histories, this dissertation concludes that the current reluctance to embrace biomedicine is connected to social memory and perceptions of the state, and its legitimacy. Had resentment of colonial public health not played a role, biomedicine would have been more readily integrated as an additional option into a repertoire of alternative therapies in Southern Africa.
机译:本文解决了南部非洲对公共卫生缺乏信心的原因之一。它研究了侵入性的殖民地公共卫生措施的影响,以及殖民地试图压制马尼卡地区的土著人的康复做法的影响。论文提出了侵入性的殖民公共卫生干预措施是否会带来意想不到的后果,例如传统医学的持续存在以及对传染病和传染病流行病学的不愿接受生物医学论点。虽然这些侵入性的殖民公共卫生措施是持续不断的,并且普遍存在,它们并不总是有效的,部分原因是殖民主义创造了边界。跨界运动从根本上影响了马尼卡地区的流行病学,跨界运动不仅传播感染,而且改变了疾病生态,使疾病控制工作复杂化。殖民地监测运动的努力导致生活受到破坏,并给村民和乡镇居民带来了很大的困难。有了新的想法,尤其是治疗服务。但是,由于殖民地政府未能为非洲人提供适当的基于治疗的服务而令他们灰心丧气,这证明向非洲人提供卫生服务的原因是欧洲定居者对感染和经济迫切的担忧而不是对非洲人的关注。但是,这些定居者的恐惧大多数是由于对流行病学的误解而引起的,并且常常被严重夸大和种族主义。尽管这些理论是否正确,但它们仍然给人们带来了困难。尽管该项目着眼于南部非洲艾滋病毒/艾滋病流行之前的公共卫生历史,但殖民地公共卫生政策的遗留影响着南部非洲人民的理解这种病。通过使用档案材料和口述历史,本文得出结论,当前不愿接受生物医学与社会记忆,对国家及其合法性的看法有关。如果对殖民地公共卫生的不满起不到作用,那么生物医学将作为一种附加选择更容易地纳入南部非洲替代疗法的范围。

著录项

  • 作者

    Dube, Francis.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of Iowa.;

  • 授予单位 The University of Iowa.;
  • 学科 History African.;Health Sciences Public Health.;Health Sciences Epidemiology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2009
  • 页码 235 p.
  • 总页数 235
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:37:46

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号