In your own words How does Crane define global health, do you find her definition useful or limiting? What does Crane see as the problem with global health practice and partnerships do you agree?

icon
Related questions
Question

In your own words

How does Crane define global health, do you find her definition useful or limiting? What does Crane see as the problem with global health practice and partnerships do you agree?

 

© Akademie Verlag ISSN 1866-2447 DOI 10.1524/behe.2010.0021
Unequal 'Partners'.
AIDS, Academia, and the Rise of Global Health
Johanna T. Crane
Abstract:
The last decade has seen the proliferation of "global health" departments, centers, programs, and ma-
jors across top research universities in North America and Europe. This trend has been particularly
pronounced in the United States, where it is connected to America's new role as a major sponsor of
HIV treatment in Africa. This paper describes the rise of "global health" as a research, funding, and
training priority within U.S. academic medicine, and the increasing desirability of "global health part-
nerships" with institutions in sub-Saharan Africa. Leading spokespersons emphasize that "partner-
ship" with poor nations is central to the mission of global health, an ethic that distinguishes it from
older, more paternalistic traditions of international health and tropical medicine. However, at the same
time, the field of academic global health depends on steep inequalities for its very existence, as it is the
opportunity to work in impoverished, low-tech settings with high disease burdens that draws North
American researchers and clinicians to global health programs and ensures their continued funding.
This paradox - in which inequality is both a form of suffering to be redressed and a professional,
knowledge-generating, opportunity to be exploited - makes the partnerships to which global health
aspires particularly challenging.
Johanna T. Crane is a Stetten Fellow in the Office of History at the U.S. National Institutes of Health
(2010-2011) and an Assistant Professor of Science, Technology, and Society at the University of Washington-
Bothell in the U.S.A. She is a medical anthropologist whose research interests include HIV/AIDS and power,
science and inequality, and the politics of global health.
E-Mail: johcrane@uw.edu
Unangemeldet | 85.178.18.244
Heruntergeladen am | 25.10.13 08:38
BEHEMOTH A Journal on Civilisation
2010 Issue Nr. 3
Keywords: global health; Africa; partnership; AIDS;
inequality
Transcribed Image Text:© Akademie Verlag ISSN 1866-2447 DOI 10.1524/behe.2010.0021 Unequal 'Partners'. AIDS, Academia, and the Rise of Global Health Johanna T. Crane Abstract: The last decade has seen the proliferation of "global health" departments, centers, programs, and ma- jors across top research universities in North America and Europe. This trend has been particularly pronounced in the United States, where it is connected to America's new role as a major sponsor of HIV treatment in Africa. This paper describes the rise of "global health" as a research, funding, and training priority within U.S. academic medicine, and the increasing desirability of "global health part- nerships" with institutions in sub-Saharan Africa. Leading spokespersons emphasize that "partner- ship" with poor nations is central to the mission of global health, an ethic that distinguishes it from older, more paternalistic traditions of international health and tropical medicine. However, at the same time, the field of academic global health depends on steep inequalities for its very existence, as it is the opportunity to work in impoverished, low-tech settings with high disease burdens that draws North American researchers and clinicians to global health programs and ensures their continued funding. This paradox - in which inequality is both a form of suffering to be redressed and a professional, knowledge-generating, opportunity to be exploited - makes the partnerships to which global health aspires particularly challenging. Johanna T. Crane is a Stetten Fellow in the Office of History at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (2010-2011) and an Assistant Professor of Science, Technology, and Society at the University of Washington- Bothell in the U.S.A. She is a medical anthropologist whose research interests include HIV/AIDS and power, science and inequality, and the politics of global health. E-Mail: johcrane@uw.edu Unangemeldet | 85.178.18.244 Heruntergeladen am | 25.10.13 08:38 BEHEMOTH A Journal on Civilisation 2010 Issue Nr. 3 Keywords: global health; Africa; partnership; AIDS; inequality
Expert Solution
trending now

Trending now

This is a popular solution!

steps

Step by step

Solved in 2 steps

Blurred answer