Yanga Nawang
Graduate Program in Health Policy and Equity, York University, Toronto, Canada.
Dahdaleh Institute for Global Health Research, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Int J Soc Determinants Health Health Serv. 2025 Jul;55(3):330-337. doi: 10.1177/27551938251314654. Epub 2025 Feb 6.
Acknowledging and valuing the lived experiences of scholars from the Global South is crucial for more nuanced, refined, and equitable approaches to and interpretations of research. The sheer lack of Tibetan scholars authoring and leading studies within the Tibetan diaspora is especially concerning. The paucity of Tibetan scholars in tuberculosis (TB) discourse is a marker and product of the colonization of academic global health and of global inequities in opportunity and credibility. The lack of Tibetan voices, advocates and scholars alike, in the TB discourse creates ambiguities and misinterpretations, and a general unwillingness to dig deeper into the social, cultural, economic, and historical contexts under which TB thrives in this community. It also symbolizes the lack of opportunity faced by many scholars based in the Global South. Efforts to decolonize global health must also parallel efforts to address other related injustices.
认识并重视来自全球南方学者的生活经历,对于采用更细致入微、完善且公平的研究方法和解释至关重要。尤其令人担忧的是,在流亡藏人社区中,撰写和主导研究的藏人学者极为匮乏。藏人学者在结核病(TB)领域的讨论中所占比例极少,这是学术全球健康领域殖民化以及全球机会和信誉不平等的一个标志和产物。在结核病讨论中缺乏藏人声音,无论是倡导者还是学者,都会造成模糊性和误解,并且普遍不愿意深入探究结核病在这个社区蓬勃发展的社会、文化、经济和历史背景。这也象征着许多来自全球南方的学者所面临的机会匮乏。去殖民化全球健康的努力也必须与解决其他相关不公正现象的努力并行。