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The research of pandemics, epidemics, and pathogens like COVID-19
reaches far beyond the scope of biomedicine. Not only an objective
for the health, political and social sciences, epidemics and
pandemics are a matter of geography: foci and vectors of
communicable diseases continue to test the efficacy of medical
control at state borders. This volume explores historical models of
quarantine, spatial isolation and detention as precautionary means
against the dissemination of disease and contagion by border
crossers, migrants and refugees. Uniquely, this volume shows that
the current border security regimes of Western states exhibit a
high share of medicalised techniques of power, which originate both
in European modernity and developed during the last quarter of the
millennium. Drawing on the collective expertise of a network of
international researchers, this interdisciplinary volume is
essential reading for those wishing to understand the
medicalisation of borders. -- .
The research of pandemics, epidemics, and pathogens like COVID-19
reaches far beyond the scope of biomedicine. It is not only an
objective for the health, political and social sciences, but
epidemics and pandemics are a matter of geography: foci and vectors
of communicable diseases continue to test the efficacy of medical
control at state borders. This volume illuminates these issues from
various disciplinary viewpoints. It starts by exploring historical
models of quarantine, spatial isolation and detention as
precautionary means against the dissemination of disease and
contagion by border crossers, migrants and refugees. Besides the
patterns of prejudice with which these groups are confronted, the
book also deals with various kinds of fear of contamination from
outside of the nation state. The contributors address the
implementation of medical techniques at state borders in the
twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, as well as the
presently practiced measures of medical and biometric screening of
migrants and refugees. Uniquely, this volume shows that the current
border security regimes of Western states exhibit a high share of
medicalised techniques of power, which originate both in European
modernity and in the medical and biological disciplines developed
during the last quarter of the millennium. Drawing on the
collective expertise of a network of international researchers,
this interdisciplinary volume is essential reading for those
wishing to understand the medicalisation of borders across the
globe, from the early eighteenth century up to the present day. --
.
This volume is a collection of chapters that deal with issues of
health, hygiene and eugenics in Southeastern Europe to 1945,
specifically, in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece and
Romania. Its major concern is to examine the transfer of medical
ideas to society via local, national and international agencies and
to show in how far developments in public health, preventive
medicine, social hygiene, welfare, gender relations and eugenics
followed a regional pattern. This volume provides insights into a
region that has to date been marginal to scholarship of the social
history of medicine.
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