
Introducing Health Anthropology
Description
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New to this Edition:
· New Chapter 4, "Human Evolution and Health," examines the respective roles of genetics and sociocultural factors in health to navigate the welter of public misinformation on genetic determinism, race, and sex and gender minorities
· Significantly expanded discussion of reproductive health, sex and gender, and gender equity throughout the book reflects current and controversial issues in the U.S.
· Up-to-date examination of the relationship of climate change to health and social wellbeing offers students insights on how our physical world is changing and the causes of those changes
· Discussion of the global impact of COVID-19 throughout the text explores the enduring changes wrought by the pandemic on human societies
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Persons
Hans A. Baer is principal honorary research fellow in the School of Social Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne. Hans was a Fulbright Scholar in at Humboldt University in East Berlin in the German Democratic Republic in 1988-1989. He has taught at several US universities, including George Peabody College for Teachers, St. John's University, the University of Southern Mississippi, the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, the University of California - Berkeley, Arizona State University, and at two Australian universities, namely the Australian National University and the University of Melbourne. Hans has published twenty-seven books and some 240 book chapters and articles on a diversity of research topics, including Mormonism, African American religion, sociopolitical life in East Germany, critical health anthropology, medical pluralism in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia, the critical anthropology of climate change, Australian climate politics, and the political economy of higher education. His most recent books are Democratic Eco-Socialism as a Real Utopia (2018), Climate Change and Capitalism in Australia: An Eco-Socialist Vision for the Future (2022), The Corporatization and Environmental Sustainability of Australian Universities: A Critical Perspective, and Building the Critical Anthropology of Climate Change: Towards a Socio-Ecological Revolution (with Merrill Singer).
Debbi Long is an honorary senior lecturer in the Wollotuka Institute (Indigenous Studies) at the University of Newcastle, Australia. She is a critical health anthropologist and a pioneer of hospital ethnography in Australia. She has undertaken health ethnography in Turkey, Eswatini, and in a variety of public hospital contexts in Australia, including maternity, spinal, intensive care and dialysis units. She has worked as a consultant in clinical organization and management on projects including quality improvement, patient safety, behaviour change, and in industrial relations contexts. Other research includes family violence education and workplace injury compensation analysis. She has taught at undergraduate and postgraduate levels in anthropology departments, international development programs, medical, nursing and allied health programs and in Indigenous studies. including foundation and support programs. Debbi is a qualified Permaculture designer and educator, and recent projects involve a focus on food security, circular economies and sustainable building, heavily informed by traditional Indigenous knowledges.
Alex Pavlotski works as a health anthropologist at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute in Melbourne. He specializes in using visual methods in research, co-design methodologies, ethnography, and anthropological teaching. Alex has worked in teaching and research with LaTrobe University, the University of Auckland, the University of Melbourne, and Monash University.
Content
Chapter 1: Introduction to the Anthropology of Health
Introduction and Overview
Encountering Health Anthropology
Three Case Studies in Applied Health Anthropology
Practical and Theoretical Contributions of Health Anthropology
Defining Health Anthropology
History of Health Anthropology
Health Anthropology Theories
Chapter 2: What Health Anthropologists Do and How They Do It
Introduction and Overview
Three Settings, Three Case Studies, Three Health Anthropologists
A Case Study
What Health Anthropologists Study
Conducting Research: A Peculiarly Anthropological Approach
Research Methods: The Anthropological Approach to Knowledge Generation
Health Anthropology in Use
The Health Anthropology Crystal Ball
Chapter 3: Understanding Health, Illness, and Disease
Introduction and Overview
Conceptions of Health and Illness
Sufferer Experience
Illness Narratives
Embodied Health Experience
Healer versus Sufferer Conception of Disease
Chapter 4: Human Evolution and Health
Introduction and Overview
The Roots of Evolutionary Health
Linkages, Trade-Offs, and Thrifty Genes
Migration and the Genetics of Health
The Out-of-Africa Intrusion
Living in the Clouds
Epigenetics
Socioeconomic Factors
The Genetics of Sexuality
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Ethnomedicine: The Worlds of Treatment and Healing
Introduction and Overview
Approaching Ethnomedicine
Indigenous and Folk Medicine Systems
An Evolutionary Model of Disease Theories and Healing Systems
Case Study: Are the Therapeutic Aspects of Religion Something That Partially Address Refugee Health Problems?
Biomedicine as the Predominant Ethnomedicine in Modern Societies
Chapter 6: Plural Medical Systems: Complexity, Complementarity, and Conflict
Introduction and Overview
A Case Study of Medical Pluralism in a Rural Area in a Developing Society: The Altiplano of Bolivia
A Case Study of Medical Pluralism in an Urban Setting of a Developing Society: A View from Central Java
A Case Study of Medical Pluralism in a Developed Society: The Australian Dominative Medical System
Typologies of Plural Medical Systems
New Directions in the Study of Medical Pluralism
Chapter 7: Health Disparity, Health Inequality
Introduction and Overview
What Is Health Disparity?
Health Disparity in the United States
Gasping for Breath
Causes of Health Disparity: Lifestyle versus Social Inequality
Biology of Poverty
Insuring Disease
Culturally Competent Care
Health and Social Disparities Cross-Culturally
Addressing Health Disparities
Pushing Back on Health Disparities
"Race" and Health Disparity
Chapter 8: Health and the Environment: Toward a Healthier World
Introduction and Overview
Medical Ecology and Critical Health Anthropology on the Environment
Health and the Environment in the Past
Health and the Environment Today
The Political Ecology of Cancer
The Impact of Private Motor Vehicles on Health
The Impact of Airplanes on Health
The Political Ecology of AIDS: Assessing a Contemporary Syndemic
Chapter 9: The Biopolitics of Life: Biotechnology, Biocapital, and Bioethics
Introduction and Overview
Critical Health Anthropology and Biotechnology
Science, Nature, and Culture
Reproductive Technologies
Divisible Bodies
Bringing the Lab into the Field: Anthropology and the Neurosciences
Molecular Biotechnologies: Tiny Pieces, Giant Infrastructures
The Story of hGH-Growing up Growth Hormone
The Culture of PCR
Visualization Technologies
When Technologies Combine
Ancestry, Families, and Genetics: Biotechnology and Belonging
Summary
Chapter 10: Strategies and Visions for a Healthier World
Introduction and Overview
Global Capitalism
Democratic Eco-Socialism as a Pathway for a Healthier World
Democratic Eco-Socialism as a Pathway to Planetary Health
How to Go from A to B
Health Anthropology as an Action-Oriented Endeavor
Source Material for Students
Glossary
References
Index
About the Authors
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