Wasted Wombs: Navigating Reproductive Interruptions in Cameroon by Erica van der Sijpt Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press, 2018. 271 pp
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 121, Heft 4, S. 958-959
ISSN: 1548-1433
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In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 121, Heft 4, S. 958-959
ISSN: 1548-1433
In: Contemporary Islam: dynamics of Muslim life, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 93-94
ISSN: 1872-0226
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 98, Heft 2, S. 444-446
ISSN: 1548-1433
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 90, Heft 3, S. 716-717
ISSN: 1548-1433
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 89, Heft 1, S. 159-160
ISSN: 1548-1433
In: Comparative Studies of Health Systems and Medical Care Series
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1989.
In: Culture, Illness, and Healing, Studies in Comparative Cross-Cultural Research 3
In: Culture, Illness and Healing 3
1: Introduction -- 1.1. The Study -- 1.2. The Setting -- 1.3. Methodology -- 1.4. Theoretical Perspectives on Health Care Decisions -- 2: The Cultural Context of Therapeutic Choice -- 2.1. Bariba Conceptions of the Order of the Universe -- 2.2. Diagnosis and Treatment -- 2.3. Divination -- 2.4. The Use of Substances -- 2.5. Medicines -- 3: Beliefs and Practices Surrounding Reproductive Processes -- 3.1. Menstruation and Clitoridectomy -- 3.2. Conception -- 3.3. Development of Fetus -- 3.4. Contraception -- 3.5. Abortion -- 3.6. Sterility -- 4: Status Among the Bariba: The Roles and Responsibilities of Women -- 4.1. Status in Bariba Society -- 4.2. Position of Women -- 4.3. Economic Subsistence -- 4.4. Political Arena -- 4.5. Domestic Relations -- 4.6. Household Responsibilities -- 5: Sociological and Career Attributes of Midwives -- 5.1. Healers: Midwives and Medicine People -- 5.2. Implications of Role Expectations for Birth Assistance -- 5.3. Recruitment of Matrones and Method of Skill Acquisition -- 5.4. Sources of Medical Knowledge -- 5.5. Matrones Own Reproductive Histories -- 5.6. Age at Unsupervised Delivery -- 5.7. Assistance at Own Child's Delivery -- 5.8. Remuneration -- 5.9. Comprehensive Care by Matrones -- 5.10. Pregnancy Counseling -- 5.11. Matrone's Role Variability -- 5.12. Spirit Possession -- 5.13. Inheritance of Spirits -- 5.14. Healing and Sambani -- 5.15. The Matrone Prototype -- 6: The Meaning of Efficacy in Relation to Obstetrical Care Preferences -- 7: Birth Assistance in the Rural Area: Patterns of Delivery Assistance -- 7.1. Delivery Assistance: Patterns of Selection in the Rural Area -- 7.2. Midwifery as a Therapeutic System -- 7.3. Structured Interviews with Matrones -- 8: Client-Practitioner Encounters -- 8.1.1. The Case of Adama -- 8.1.2. The Case of Sako -- 8.1.3. The Case of the Prolapsed Cord -- 8.1.4. The Case of the Terrifying Breech 120 -- 8.1.5 The Case of Bona -- 8.2. Pain as a Cultural Phenomenon -- 8.3. Pregnancy (by Nicole) -- 8.4. Conclusion -- 9: Utilization of National Health Services for Maternity Care in the District of Kouande -- 9.1. Clinic vs. Home Delivery: A Pehunko Sample -- 9.2. Utilization of the Pehunko Dispensary -- 9.3. Pehunko Women at the Kouande Maternity Clinic -- 9.4. The Kouande Maternity Clinic: General Utilization -- 10: Conclusion -- 10.1. Implications of the Bariba Study for the Cross-Cultural Study of Midwifery -- 10.2. The Involvement of Indigenous Midwives in National Health Systems -- 10.3. Training Programs -- Appendices -- Appendix A: Demographic Data -- Appendix B: Female Circumcision Songs -- Notes.
In: Annual review of anthropology, Band 40, Heft 1, S. 345-361
ISSN: 1545-4290
Globalization, including the global flows of people, is clearly linked to disease transmission and vulnerability to health risks among immigrant populations. Anthropological research on transnational migration and health documents the implications of population movements for health and well-being. Studies of immigrant health reveal the importance of the social, political, and economic production of distress and disease as well as the structures and dynamics that produce particular patterns of access to health services. This review points to underlying political, economic, and social structures that produce particular patterns of health and disease among transnational migrants. Both critical and phenomenological analyses explore ideas of alterity and community, which underlie the production and management of immigrant health. Research on immigrant health underscores the importance of further attention to policies of entitlement and exclusion, which ultimately determine health vulnerabilities and accessibility of health care.
In: Body & society, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 79-102
ISSN: 1460-3632
In: Man: the journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Band 20, Heft 3, S. 573
In: Man: the journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Band 19, Heft 4, S. 700
Global ethnography : problems of theory and method / Susan L. Erikson -- Globalizing, reproducing, and civilizing rural subjects : population control policy and constructions of rural identity in China / Junjie Chen -- Planning men out of family planning : a case study from Mexico / Matthew Gutmann -- Antiviral but pronatal? ARVs and reproductive health : the view from a South African township / Lisa Ann Richey -- Birth in the age of AIDS : local responses to global policies and technologies in South India / Cecilia Van Hollen -- Competing globalizing influences on local Muslim women's reproductive health and human rights in Sudan : women's rights, international feminism, and Islamism / Ellen Gruenbaum -- Reproductive viability and the state : embryonic stem cell research in India / Aditya Bharadwaj -- Globalization and Gametes : Islam, assisted reproductive technologies, and the Middle Eastern state / Marcia C. Inhorn -- Law, technology, and gender relations : following the path of DNA paternity tests in Brazil / Claudia Fonseca -- From sex workers to tourism workers : a structural approach to male sexual labor in Dominican tourism areas / Mark B. Padilla -- Family reunification ideals and the practice of transnational reproductive life among Africans in Europe / Caroline H. Bledsoe and Papa Sow -- Problematizing polygamy, managing maternity : the intersections of global, state, and family politics in the lives of West African migrant women in France / Carolyn F. Sargent -- Lost in translation : lessons from California on the implementation of state-mandated fetal diagnosis in the context of globalization / Carole H. Browner -- Reproductive rights in no-woman's-land : politics and humanitarian assistance / Linda M. Whiteford and Aimee R. Eden -- The mystery child and the politics of reproduction : between national imaginaries and transnational confrontations / Didier Fassin.
In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Band 50, Heft 1, S. 9-26
ISSN: 1552-3381
Strategies of state surveillance shape the construction of migrant identities in France. Focusing on migrants from the Senegal River Valley in West Africa, the authors suggest that ideological and institutional constraints concerning legal status and family reunification create a shifting world of unstable identities for these migrants. The fall 2005 riots across France have been widely cited as an illustration of the failure of the French model of immigrant integration. Restrictive legislation since 1975 has challenged gender relations in migrant communities. The gendered production of immigrant identities merits special attention; women's and men's diverse experiences require differing strategies of adjustment. During the past 30 years, anti-immigrant discourse/practice has effectively contested the state policy of integration and its emphasis on achieving nationality as the ultimate immigrant objective. The gendered strategies of West African migrants demonstrate that state polices have created a new category of migrants whose everyday lives seem permanently in transition.
In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Band 50, Heft 1, S. 3-8
ISSN: 1552-3381
In: Cadernos pagu, Heft 29, S. 257-284
Através da comparação de conexões e interações entre França e África Ocidental e do uso das telecomunicações por imigrantes chegando à França em períodos diversos entre 1965 e 2005, este artigo demonstra a relevância dessas tecnologias de comunicação na (re)definição da distância social e na facilitação do envolvimento continuado de migrantes na tomada de decisões familiares nas suas comunidades de origem.