REQUIRED READINGS:
Bradby, H. (2012). ”Race, ethnicity and health: The costs and benefits of conceptualising racism and ethnicity”, Social Science and Medicine, 75: 995–958
Bredström, A. (2017). “Culture and Context in Mental Health Diagnosing: Scrutinizing the DSM-5 Revision”, Journal of Medical Humanities. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10912-0179501-1
Bhugra, D. and Asya, P. (2005). ”Ethnic density, cultural congruity and mental illness in migrants”, International Review of Psychiatry, 17(2): 133–137.
Bosco, F. J. (2014). Actor-Network Theory, Networks, and Relational Geographies. In Aitken, S. and Valentine, G. (eds) Approaches to Human Geography: Philosophies, Theories, People and Practices, London: Sage, pp. 150-162
Breslau, J. (2004). “Cultures of trauma: Anthropological views of posttraumatic stress disorder in international health”, Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 28: 113–126.
Chow-White, P. and Duster, T. (2011). “Do Health and Forensic DNA Databases Increase Racial Disparities”, PLoS Med. 8(10): 1–3
Deane, K.D, Parkhurst, J.O. and Johnston, D. (2010). ”Linking migration, mobility and HIV”, Tropical Medicine & International Health, 15(12): 1458–1463.
Fassin, D. and d’Halluin, E. (2005). “The truth from the Body: Medical Certificates as Ultimate Evidence for Asylum Seekers”, American Anthropologist, 107(4): 597–608.
Fullwiley, D. (2014). “The ‘Contemporary Synthesis’: When Politically Inclusive Genomic Science Relies on Biological Notions of Race”, ISIS: The History of Science Society, 105: 803–814
Giami, A. and Perrey, C. (2012). “Transformation in the Medicalization of Sex: HIV Prevention between Discipline and Biopolitics, The Journal of Sex Research, 49(4): 353–361.
Gonzales, A., Kertész, J. and Tayac, G. (2007) .”Eugenics as Indian Removal: Sociohistorical Processes and the De(con)struction of American Indians in the Southeast”, The Public Historian, 29 (3): 53–67.
Hanefeld, J., Vearey, J., Lunt, N. et al. (2017). ”A global research agenda on migration, mobility, and health”, The Lancet, 389: 2358–2359.
Hankivsky, O. (2012). Women's health, men's health, and gender and health: Implications of intersectionality. Social Science and Medicine 74 (11): 1712–1720.
Kirmayer, L. (2006). ”Beyond the ‘New Cross-cultural Psychiatry’: Cultural Biology, Discursive Psychology and the Ironies of Globalization”, Trancultural Psychiatry, 43(1): 126–144.
Kleinman, A. M. (1977), ”Depression, somatization and the ‘new cross-cultural psychiatry’”, Social Science and Medicine, 11: 3–10.
Lee, C. (2009). ”’Race’ and ’ethnicity’ in biomedical research: How do scientists construct and explain differences in health?”, Social Science & Medicine, 68: 1183–1190.
Lemke, T. (2011). Biopolitics: an advanced introduction. New York: New York University Press.
Leonard, T. (2005). ”Retrospectives: Eugenics and Economics in the Progressive Era”, The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 19 (4): 207–224.
Lock, M. (2015). “Comprehending the Body in the Era of the Epigenome”, Current Anthropology, 56(2): 151–177.
Mizrachi, E. and Spektorowski, A. (2004). ”Eugenics and the Welfare State in Sweden: The Politics of Social Margins and the Idea of a Productive Society”, Journal of Contemporary History, 39 (3).
Mohatt, N.V., Thompson, A. B, Thai, N. D., and Tebes, J. K. (2014). “Historical trauma as public narrative: A conceptual review of how history impacts present-day health”, Social Science and Medicine, 106: 128–136.
Mora-Gámez, F. (2016). Reparation beyond statehood: assembling rights restitution in postconflict Colombia. Chapters 3: “Registering” and 4: “Organising” (Avilable at LISA
Papadopoulos, D. (2018). Experimental Practice. Technoscience, Alterontologies, and MoreThan-Social Movements. Durham: Duke University Press. (Assigned pages available at LISAM)
Rabinow, P. and Rose, N. (2014). “Biopower Today”, Biosocieties, 1(2): 195–217.
Reardon, J. and Tallbear, K. (2012). “’Your DNA Is Our History’: Genomics, Anthropology, and the Construction of Whiteness as Property”, Current Anthropology, 55(S.5): S233– S245.
Rosen, G. (2016). “Has DSM-5 saved PTSD from itself?” The British Journal of Psychiatry, 209, 275–276
Ruiz, M.V. (2002). “Border Narratives, HIV/AIDS, and Latin/o Health in the United States: A Cultural Analysis, Feminist Media Studies, 2(1): 37–62.
Sargent, C. and Larchanché, S. (2011). “Transnational Migration and Global Health: The Production and Management of Risk, Illness and Access to Care”, Annu. Rev. Anthropol., 40: 345–361.
Shim, J. (2010). ”The stratified biomedicalization of heart disease: Expert and lay perspectives on racial and class inequality”. In Clarke, Adele E. et al Biomedicalization: Technoscience, Health and Illness in the U.S., Duke University Press, pp. 218–241.
Summerfield, D. (1999). ”A critique of seven assumptions behind psychological trauma programmes in war- affected areas”. Social Science & Medicine, 48: 1449–1462.
Townsend, L., Giorgio, M., Zembe, Y., Cheyip, M. and Mathews, C. (2014). “HIV Prevalence and Risk Behaviours Among Foreign Migrant Women Residing in Cape Town, South Africa”, AIDS and Behaviour, 18:2020–2029.
Zimmerman et al. (2011). “Migration and Health: A Framework for 21st Century PolicyMaking”, PLoS Med., 8(5): e1001034
SUGGESTED READINGS:
Batten, S. (1908). ”The Redemption of the Unfit”, American Journal of Sociology, 14 (2): 233260
Camlin CS, Hosegood V, Newell M-L, McGrath N, Bärnighausen T, et al. (2010). ”Gender, Migration and HIV in Rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa”, PLoS ONE, 5(7): e11539: doi:10.1371/journal.pone.001153
Caruth, C. (1996). Unclaimed experience: Trauma, narrative, and history. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press
Castaneda, H. (2010). ”Im/migration and health: conceptual, methodological, and theoretical propositions for applied anthropology”, Napa Bulletin, 34: 6–27.
Clarke, Adele E. et al. (2010). Biomedicalization: Technoscience, Health and Illness in the U.S. Duke University Press.
Galton, F. (1904). ”Eugenics: Its definition, Scope and Aims”, American Journal of Sociology, 10 (1): 1–25. (with the discussion following Galton's paper as optional).
Gould, Stephen Jay. (1996). The mismeasure of man. Rev. and expanded. New York: Norton
Epstein, S. (2007). Inclusion: the politics of difference in medical research. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Fausto-Sterling, A. (2008). ”The Bare Bones of Race”, Social Studies of Science, 38(5): 657– 694.
Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the social: An introduction to actor-network-theory. Oxford university press.
Law, J. (2009) “Actor network theory and material semiotics”, In Turner, B. (ed.) The new Blackwell companion to social theory, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 141–158.
Lemke, T. (2011). Biopolitics: an advanced introduction. New York: New York University Press.
Lynch, Richard A. (2014). “The politics of health in the eighteenth century”, Foucault Studies, 18: 113–127.
McGrath N, Eaton JW, Newell M-L, Hosegood V. (2015). “Migration, sexual behaviour, and HIV risk: a general population cohort in rural South Africa”, Lancet HIV, 2:e252–259.
Mora-Gámez, F. (2016). Reparation beyond statehood: assembling rights restitution in postconflict Colombia. (Avilable at LISAM)
Napier, A. D. et al. (2014). ”Culture and Health”, The Lancet, 384( 9954): 1607 - 1639
Papadopoulos, D., Stephenson, N., & Tsianos, V. (2008). Escape routes: Control and subversion in the 21st century. Pluto Press.
Papadopoulos, D. & Tsianos, V. S. (2013). “After citizenship: autonomy of migration, organisational ontology and mobile commons”, Citizenship studies, 17(2): 178-196.
Patton, C. (2002). Globalizing AIDS. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Rose, N. (2007). The politics of life itself: biomedicine, power, and subjectivity in the twentyfirst century. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Stepan, N. (1986). ”Race and Gender: The Role of Analogy in Science”, Isis, 77 (2): 261–277.
Ward, R. (1910). ”National Eugenics in Relation to Immigration”, The North American Review, 192 (656): 56–67.
Williams, S. J., Martin, P. and Gabe, J. (2011). “The pharmaceuticalisation of society” A framework for analysis, Sociology of Health and Illness, 33(5): 710–725.