Full Description
An Anthropology of Global Immunization explores some of the most pressing vaccine concerns of our time, from HPV to COVID-19, HIV and beyond. This edited collection develops a unique anthropological response to the question of global immunization, addressing issues from vaccine hesitancy and conspiracy theories to local biopolitics. The global perspectives in this volume are bound together by critical anthropological themes of nationalism, governance and local biosocial realities. The collection lays a critical foundation to understand vaccine development, implementation and public health policy.
Contents
Introduction: An Anthropology of Global Immunization
Rebecca Irons, Sahra Gibbon, Joanna Cook and Aaron Parkhurst
Chapter 1. Exemplifying Public Health? COVID-19, Vaccines and the Making of a Secure 'Jewish State'
Ben Kasstan-Dabush
Chapter 2. Vaccination and Nationalism in the Danish Welfare State
Jens Seeberg and Malthe Lehrmann
Chapter 3. Another Day, Another Dose: 'Good Citizenship' and the COVID-19 Vaccine for Venezuelan Migrants Living with HIV in Bogotá
Rebecca Irons
Chapter 4. A Regulatory State of Exception
Andrew Lakoff
Chapter 5. The Race Against Time: Interrupting HIV Science and the Vaccine Against COVID-19
Susan Levine and Lenore Manderson
Chapter 6. Reframing Experimentality, Governing Ambiguity: Official Discredit of COVID-19 Vaccines in Brazil
Rosana Castro, Marko Monteiro and Alberto Urbinatti
Chapter 7. Confronting (Mis)Trust in Uncertain Times: Anthropological Insights into Vaccine Development and Deployment for Emergent Epidemics in Tanzania and Sierra Leone
Luisa Enria and Shelley Lees
Chapter 8. Of Needles and Informational Haystacks: Vaccine (Mis)Information Practices in Dublin, Ireland
Dan Nightingale
Afterword
Samantha Vanderslott
Index