Bump Jesse B, Aniebo Ifeyinwa
Department of Global Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Initiative on the Future of Health and Economic Resiliency in Africa, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2022 Sep 6;2(9):e0000936. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000936. eCollection 2022.
This paper explores the decolonization of global health through a focus on malaria and European colonialism in Africa. We employ an historical perspective to better articulate what "colonial" means and to specify in greater detail how colonial ideas, patterns, and practices remain an obstacle to progress in global health now. This paper presents a history of malaria, a defining aspect of the colonial project. Through detailed analysis of the past, we recount how malaria became a colonial problem, how malaria control rose to prominence as a colonial activity, and how interest in malaria was harnessed to create the first schools of tropical medicine and the academic specialization now known as global health. We discuss how these historical experiences shape malaria policy around the world today. The objective of this paper is to advance discussion about how malaria and other aspects of global health could be decolonized, and to suggest directions for future analysis that can lead to concrete steps for action.
本文通过聚焦疟疾以及欧洲在非洲的殖民主义,探讨全球卫生领域的去殖民化。我们采用历史视角,以更好地阐明“殖民”的含义,并更详细地说明殖民观念、模式和做法如今如何仍然是全球卫生进步的障碍。本文呈现了疟疾的历史,这是殖民计划的一个决定性方面。通过对过去的详细分析,我们讲述了疟疾如何成为一个殖民问题,疟疾控制如何作为一项殖民活动而变得突出,以及对疟疾的关注如何被用于创建首批热带医学院和如今被称为全球卫生的学术专业。我们讨论这些历史经历如何塑造当今世界各地的疟疾政策。本文的目的是推动关于疟疾及全球卫生其他方面如何能够去殖民化的讨论,并为未来分析指明方向,从而能够促成具体的行动步骤。