Health, State and Society in Kenya
Faces of Contact and Change
George Ndege
This book examines the conflicts brought on by the introduction, management and institutionalization of Western biomedicine into Kenya. From the dawn of the colonial age, there were conflicts over the issues and meanings of sickness, health and therapy. Conversations often broke down, especially during the first two decades of the twentieth century, because of the natural and strong desire on the part of local populations, the state and biomedical practitioners to protect their respective hallowed traditions, approaches and identities.
However, the persistence of epidemics, spiraling mortality rates, the interdependent nature of the colonial economy, and the establishment and recommendations of Commissions of Inquiry turned the tensions of race and conflict into dialogues about accommodation and compromise. The focus on a common good, rather than upon partisan satisfaction, became a dominant force. Western biomedicine and African traditional therapies each contributed to the growth and development of colonial health care in Kenya.
GEORGE NDEGE is Professor of History at St. Louis University
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DETAILS
290 pages Size: 9 x 6 in 13 digit ISBN: 9781580460996
Binding: Hardback First published: 01/Jan/2100 Price: 70.00 USD / 50.00 GBP
Imprint: University of Rochester Press Series: Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora
Subject: African Studies
BIC class: AVH
STATUS: Available
Details updated on 18/11/2008
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Contents
| 1 | |
Introduction
| 2 | |
The Unsettling Contact: Epidemics, Biomedicine and the Ideology of Order
| 3 | |
In Search of Compromise: Economy, Labor, War and related Epidemics
| 4 | |
Careers in Health and Healing: Competing Visions of Training and Practice
| 5 | |
The Burden of Expansion and Reform in the interwar period
| 6 | |
Grappling with Change in the Age of Transition and Anxiety: Decolonization, Independence, and AIDS
| 7 | |
Conclusion
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Reviews
This is an important and well-written history. AFRICAN HISTORY
[This book] is an important addition to the work on health care in East Africa, as well as providing insights into the process of formulation of colonial and post-colonial health policy, and the debates within African local government institutions. J OF IMPERIAL AND COMMONWEALTH HISTORY
The author has a good familiarity with the anthropological and historical literature and an eye for important moments and key forces in the history of twentieth-century Kenyan health care. INTL J OF AFRICAN HISTORICAL STUDIES Vol 36 No 2 (2003)
This work does a great service by discussing major issues related to government authority and health in language those outside the disciplines of history and anthropology can easily follow. For health-care professionals and general readers, this study will be a valuable introduction to the politics of health care in Kenya. JOURNAL OF INTERDISCIPLINARY HISTORY, Spring 2004
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