ABSTRACT
The landscape of healthcare is changing rapidly, both on an organisational and a technological level. This book gathers medical anthropologists to examine the ways that both patients and health care workers are being affected by new policies, market, and technologies. Contributors cover a wide range of topics, including vaccination, disability, migration, and self-medication, making clear that not only are changing circumstances leading to the emergence of new socialities, but they are also driving new ethics and moralities.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|32 pages
Reflecting Theory—Revisiting Concepts
chapter 1|12 pages
Biosociality extended
chapter 2|18 pages
Emerging animistic socialities?
part II|60 pages
TRANSFORMATIONS IN HEALTHCARE POLICY—Politics and ethics
chapter 3|16 pages
Selling global HPV
chapter 4|14 pages
The birth of disabled people as ‘ambiguous citizens’
chapter 5|14 pages
Market thinking and home nursing
chapter 6|14 pages
The production and transformation of subjectivity
part III|46 pages
New Socialities and Subjectivities in Care
chapter 7|18 pages
Muslim migrants in Montreal and perinatal care
chapter 8|6 pages
‘I am here not to repair but see the person as a whole’
chapter 10|14 pages
Configurations for action
part IV|28 pages
New Subjectivities, Socialities, and The Media
