‘The one who hides their sickness will not get medicine’ (Swahili Proverb): The need for ethnography to understand Neglected Zoonotic Diseases

From outer space this world appears borderless, a vast expanse of land populated by organisms ranging from the microscopic to the gigantic. Sharing the same space, it is easy to imagine how humans, animals, and pathogens are intertwined in a perpetual cycle of life and death.

Read More

‘God Works through Doctors’: Perceptions of healing within a Baptist Church

Problematizing the distinction drawn between the spheres of science and religion, this fieldwork report considers portrayals of physical healing within a Baptist church and assesses the extent to which the categories of faith healing and biomedicine are considered mutually exclusive within the church context.

Read More

Would an Anthropology of Ebola (help) find its ultimate cure?

The Ebola River has meandered through the Democratic Republic of Congo for eons, yet only recently has its name burst beyond its banks to flood the world. When the Ebola virus was first discovered in 1976 in a village close to the River’s banks it received little global attention or funding to find a treatment or cure.

Read More