Health and Medicine during and after the Pacific War: Pacific Islanders and Medical Infrastructure

Christine Winter (Editor), Alexandra Widmer (Editor)

Research output: Contribution to specialist publicationSpecial issue

Abstract

Special Issue Health and History, Vol 23, No. 2, 2021.

This special issue takes a critical look at the history of health and medicine in the Pacific Islands by focusing on medical infrastructure and the professionalisation of Pasifika people during and after the Pacific War. This issue brings together historical and anthropological literatures on health, medicine, and infrastructure and the authors employ methods from both disciplines, combining archival sources from state, mission, and medical institutions with oral histories and participant observation. As histories of a present where the discipline of critical global health emphasises the experiences of people who are implicated in as ‘targets’ in global health projects and technologies, these articles present Pacific centred historical consciousness in relation to health and medicine in the context of social change and upheaval. They are histories that seek to centre Pacific Islanders' experiences with respect to health and medical institutions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages1-127
Volume23
No.2
Specialist publicationHealth and History
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2021

Bibliographical note

The attachment PDF contains the cover pages, table of contents, and the two articles by Winter:
Alexandra Widmer and Christine Winter, Health and Medicine during and after the Pacific War: Pacific Islanders, institutions, infrastructure, ingenuities, in: Widmer and Winter, ‘Health and Medicine during and after the Pacific War: Pacific Islanders and Medical Infrastructure’, Special Issue Health and History, Vol 23, No. 2, 2021, pp. 1-9 [2019 Q3]

Competent Men: Papuan and New Guinean Medical Staff in the Wake of the Pacific War, in: Widmer and Winter, ‘Health and Medicine during and after the Pacific War: Pacific Islanders and Medical Infrastructure’, Special Issue Health and History, Vol 23, No. 2, 2021, pp. 95-113 [2019 Q3]

Keywords

  • Pacific health
  • Pacific history
  • History of science
  • Medical infrastructure
  • decolonisation
  • colonialism
  • Australian history
  • New Zealand history
  • Papua New Guinea history
  • Fiji
  • Southern theory
  • Pacific War
  • WWII

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