2017
DOI: 10.1177/1367877917702442
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The epidemiological factor: A genealogy of the link between medicine and politics

Abstract: From the beginning of our civilization, the existence of infectious and contagious diseases required a search for solutions for both an individual and medical-health problem, and political interventions that involve a territory and population that must be managed. In this respect, epidemiology constitutes a strategic dimension in analysing the complex relationships established between scientific conduct and the political management of a territory. With this focus, we will provide a short historic genealogy of … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Should we embrace this framework, we would also recognise that there is no justification for public health to address microbes but not economic and political structures that transform those into pathogens. As Maureira et al (2018) noted, epidemiology and public health are historically situated in a grey area between science and politics, hence the efforts to render these two apolitical are counter-productive to their purposes.…”
Section: Rethinking Urban Pathogenicitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Should we embrace this framework, we would also recognise that there is no justification for public health to address microbes but not economic and political structures that transform those into pathogens. As Maureira et al (2018) noted, epidemiology and public health are historically situated in a grey area between science and politics, hence the efforts to render these two apolitical are counter-productive to their purposes.…”
Section: Rethinking Urban Pathogenicitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This event is an important reminder that even the most technical and 'data-driven' scientific claims, whether made by laboratory sciences, public health or medicine, 31,32 once in the public sphere as public policy become amenable to public interpretation, contextualization and contestation by multiple social actors. 33 In other words, public health, together with medicine and science itself, are not value neutral, but profoundly social and political in terms of their relevance and their effects [33][34][35][36] -as recognized long ago by Rudolf Virchow. 37 To be sure, the tensions that arose in light of strict measures underscore the ways in which 'science', emerging and ever-expanding evidentiary sources, social values and political expedience have intermingled in the policy responses to the COVID-19 crisis.…”
Section: While Members Of the Ontario Science Advisory Table (Osat) Amentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This event is an important reminder that even the most technical and ‘data‐driven’ scientific claims, whether made by laboratory sciences, public health or medicine, 31 , 32 once in the public sphere as public policy become amenable to public interpretation, contextualization and contestation by multiple social actors. 33 In other words, public health, together with medicine and science itself, are not value neutral, but profoundly social and political in terms of their relevance and their effects 33 , 34 , 35 , 36 —as recognized long ago by Rudolf Virchow. 37 …”
Section: From Uncertainty To Disagreementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an ostensible reversal of the globalization logic, the pandemic crisis is re-signifying all big spaces as sources of imminent danger, thus pushing the society into the biopolitics of small spaces that are expected to be controlled and monitored much better than big crossborder expanses. This trend might be conceptualized as biosecurity (Maureira and Tirado 2018), with new disciplinary practices and regimes of control and regulation over human bodies and their mobilities (Cameron 2007).…”
Section: Biopolitics As Overarching Theoretical Framementioning
confidence: 99%