Peace in the Clinic: Rethinking "Global Health Diplomacy" in the Somali Region of Ethiopia.

Clicks: 236
ID: 48255
2016
Drawing on ethnographic research with Somalis, within aid organizations, and within health care facilities in the Somali Region of Ethiopia, this article argues that what is called "global health diplomacy," despite its origins and articulations in interstate politics, is fundamentally local and interpersonal. As evidence, I outline two very different health programs in the Somali Region of Ethiopia, and how, in each, existing animosities and political grievances were either reinforced or undermined. I argue that the provision of health care in politically insecure and post-conflict settings like the Somali Region of Ethiopia is precarious but pivotal: medical encounters have the potential to either worsen the conditions in which conflicts and crises recur, or build new interpersonal and governmental relations of trust. Effective global health diplomacy, therefore, cannot be limited to building clinics and donating medicine, but must also explicitly include building positive relationships of trust between oppositional groups within clinical spaces.
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carruth2016peaceculture Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Carruth, Lauren;
Journal culture, medicine and psychiatry
Year 2016
DOI 10.1007/s11013-015-9455-6
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