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The Program in
History of Health Sciences of the Department of Anthropology, History, and Social Medicine

invites you to the following presentations:



Other DAHSM Upcoming Events: http://dahsm.medschool.ucsf.edu/events/index.aspx


Wednesday, March 11, 2009         
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00   

Lisa Rofel, PhD
Department Chair, Professor of Anthropology, University of California Santa Cruz

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009       
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00   

EJ Sobo,  PhD
Anthropology, San Diego State University

Selling globally outsourced healthcare to US-based patient-consumers: The cultural appeal of common medical travel agency marketing techniques


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Wednesday, April 29, 2009           
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00 
  
Nancy Burke, PhD
Assistant Professor, Cancer Center,
Medical Anthropology, UCSF    

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009
UCSF Medical Anthropology Colloquium Series – Ben Hickler
Dissertation Defense

The 2008 Diana Forsythe Dissertation Award Winner in Social Studies of Science, Technology & Health

Ben Hickler, PhD Candidate, UCB/UCSF Joint Medical Program

Politics of Animal Health - Biosecurity and Poverty Alleviation in the Lower Mekong


Laurel Heights Rm 376 | 3:30-5:00     
***Note Room Change***

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009 -CANCELLED
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00
               
Emily Martin, PhD
Institute of the History of Production of Knowledge

Sleepless in America

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00
               
Galen Joseph, PhD,
Assistant Professor, Cancer Center
Medical Anthropology, UCSF

‘Ethnics’, Ethics and Equity: Increasing “Minority” Accrual to Cancer Clinical Trials

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00

Betsy Pohlman, PhD Candidate
UCB/UCSF Joint Medical Program 

The Ethics and Politics of Caring and Curing: The Case of Alzheimer's Disease and Down Syndrome


Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 376 | 3:30-5:00
*NOTE ROOM CHANGE*

Amar Dhand, MD
Neurology Resident, UCSF 

Maintaining ethnographic practices during medical residency: Ideas for multidisciplinarians


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Monday, October 19, 2009
Lecture Series in the History of Modern Biomedicine
Parnassus N-217 | 12:00-1:30
*NOTE ROOM CHANGE*

Jessica Wang, PhD
Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in U.S. History, Department of History, University of British Columbia 

Mad Dogs and Other New Yorkers: Rabies, Dread Disease, and the Politics of Animal Control, 1850-1920

“Mad Dogs and Other New Yorkers” seeks to reconstruct the urban world that humans and dogs shared, explore the interrelationship between people, dogs, and disease, and place rabies in the context of urban politics, class conflict, and the social history of the American city.  In New York City during the nineteenth and early twentieth century, dog-catching pitted class against class, as well as reformers against aspiring public health professionals.  The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) eventually wrested New York City’s animal control functions away from the “rough men” and “street urchins” who had dominated the trade up until the 1890s, but by the early twentieth century, the New York City Department of Health began to assert its power over the ASPCA in matters of rabies prevention.  The talk explores the class conflicts surrounding animal control in the nineteenth century, and it examines how changes in institutional capacity within the public health bureaucracy prompted the Department of Health’s newly assertive attitude toward animal control.  Dog-catching and rabies prevention reflected the broader shift toward more formal and professionalized modes of public authority that took place in the United States during the early decades of the twentieth century.

Jessica Wang is Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair (Tier 2) in U.S. History at the University of British Columbia.  Her previous works include American Science in an Age of Anxiety: Scientists, Anticommunism, and the Cold War (University of North Carolina Press, 1999), and essays on cold war science, internationalism and U.S. foreign relations, and law, social science, and New Deal political economy.

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Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00 

Joseph Dumit, PhD
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Davis


Moral Insecurity: Patient Risk Prevention vs. Prescription Maximization


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Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Medical Anthropology Colloquium Seminar
Laurel Heights Ste 474 | 3:30-5:00 

Suepattra May, PhD Candidate
UCB/UCSF Joint Medical Program     

Whatever She Wants: An Ethnography of American Women, Modern Love, Sex and the Internet


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Other DAHSM Upcoming Events: http://dahsm.medschool.ucsf.edu/events/index.aspx

For more information, please contact Kimberly Bissell at bissellk@dahsm.ucsf.edu or 415-476-7223.        

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