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Decolonizing Medicine

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Decolonizing Medicine examines Bolivian state-led efforts to decolonize health services during the administration of Evo Morales, Bolivia's first Indigenous president. Governing from 2006 to 2019, ...
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  • 06 May 2025
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Decolonizing Medicine examines Bolivian state-led efforts to decolonize health services during the administration of Evo Morales, Bolivia's first Indigenous president. Governing from 2006 to 2019, the Morales administration undertook sweeping reforms, vowing to reverse intertwined colonial and capitalist systems of oppression and restore Indigenous good living. Predating more recent calls from global health practitioners to "decolonize global health," Bolivian state projects included a range of initiatives, such as integrating Indigenous traditional medical practitioners into clinical care and encouraging cultural sensitivity among healthcare providers. And yet, despite layered institutional investments, many Indigenous patients continued to describe their local hospital as a place "donde no hay atención" ("where there is no care").

  Through fine-grained ethnography of health policymaking and implementation, Gabriela Elisa Morales tracks how Bolivian biomedical and public health institutions fell short of the far-reaching transformations proposed by decolonial activists and theorists. At the same time, she foregrounds how Indigenous patients and healers challenged the terms of caregiving and demanded that state and medical institutions fulfill their obligations to Indigenous flourishing. In tracing these dynamics, Morales articulates the multiplicity of ways that care practice becomes a locus of political foreclosure as well as radical transformation, with crucial insights for broader projects of decolonization and Indigenous rights.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 308
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 06 May 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503642720
Format: Paperback
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"This meticulous book illuminates why and how the 'leftist' or 'progressive' government of Evo Morales ended up reinscribing rather than dismantling deeply rooted histories of global capitalism and colonialism in health care. This is a remarkable accomplishment with many lessons for anthropology, social medicine, history, and Latin American studies." —César E. Abadía-Barrero, University of Connecticut
Gabriela Elisa Morales is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Scripps College.
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Preface: Positioning Critique
INTRODUCTION: Waiting for Reform
1. The Bureaucratic Politics of Good Living: Health Policy in the Morales Era
2. Reorienting Care: Benevolence, Violence, and Medical Training
3. Warm and Cold: Cultural Adaptation and the Circulation of Temperature
4. Embodied Redistribution: Extraction and the Labor of Healing
5. Doctor, Patient, Kin: Remaking Hospital Relations
6. Accountable Care: Participatory Planning and the Practice of Complaint
CONCLUSION: Political Aftermaths
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index