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"Creating (Dis)Advantage: How Global Health Statistics Work" by Dr. Susan Erikson

Thursday, September 27, 2012
4:00 AM
2239 Lane Hall

Health statistics work to produce particular kinds of knowledge, decision-, and profit-making that are not innocent. "The numbers" are calculations of health, but calculations made at a distance.  They make the messiness of human health seem ordered and controllable, even when health is not. In this colloquium, we discuss how health statistics operate as transnational artifacts in the business of global health.  Ethnographic and descriptive data from two very different countries, Sierra Leone and Germany show how statistics are not quite what they seem, despite operating in global health as if they are freely formed and objective.  Empirically rich data from both countries help us analyze how numbers organize people and constitute subject positions, but do not always improve health.

Co- sponsored by Department of Anthropology, Institute for Research on Women and Gender (IRWG), The African Studies Center (ASC), Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Science Technology Studies.