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Where They Need Me
Local Clinicians and the Workings of Global Health in Haiti
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Main description:

Where They Need Me examines the work of Haitian health professionals in humanitarian aid encounters. Haiti is the target of an overwhelming number of internationally funded health projects. While religious institutions sponsor a number of these initiatives, many are implemented within the secular framework of global health. Pierre Minn illustrates the divergent criteria that actors involved in global health use to evaluate interventions' efficacy.

Haitian physicians, nurses, and administrative staff are hired to carry out these global health programs, distribute or withhold resources, and produce accounts of interventions' outcomes. In their roles as intermediaries, Haitian clinicians are expected not only to embody the humanitarian projects of foreign funders and care for their impoverished patients but also to act as sources of support for their own kin networks, while negotiating their future prospects in a climate of pronounced scarcity and insecurity. In Where They Need Me, Minn argues that a serious consideration of these local health care providers in the context of global health is essential to counter simplistic depictions of clinicians and patients as heroes, villains, or victims as well as to move beyond the donor-recipient dyad that has dominated theoretical work on humanitarianism and the gift.


Contents:

Introduction1. The Logic of Uncoordination2. "Working Together for Health" at the Hopital Universitaire Justinien3. Between a Fund and a Hard Place4. Components of a Moral Economy5. Saints, Villains, and ChampionsConclusion


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9781501763854
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: September, 2022
Pages: 186
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Public Health

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