Virus Research in Twentieth-Century Uganda

Between Local and Global

Julia Ross Cummiskey author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Ohio University Press

Published:26th Nov '24

£66.00

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Virus Research in Twentieth-Century Uganda cover

Close attention to the experiences of researchers based in Uganda unsettles common understandings about scientific knowledge production, the significance of place, and international health work in the twentieth century.

This case study contextualizes calls to decolonize global health within a long history of negotiations between scientists based in Uganda, the United States, and Europe over what research should be done, by whom, and where. The book covers colonial Uganda through the first years of Yoweri Museveni’s presidency.

Virus Research in Twentieth-Century Uganda presents the stories of scientists at the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI), a biomedical center founded in 1936. The book analyzes the strategies and conditions that allowed the institute to endure and thrive through successive political and scientific regimes of the interwar period, the postwar period, the transition to independence, the conflicts of the 1970s and 1980s, and the Museveni presidency. Julia Ross Cummiskey combines methods and themes from the history of medicine and public health, science and technology studies, and African studies to show that the story of the UVRI and the people who worked there transforms our understanding of the nature of local and international expertise and the evolution of global health research over the course of the twentieth century.
Global health is one of the chief areas in which African and foreign institutions interact today. Billions of dollars are invested in global health projects on the continent, many involving strategically selected “local partners.” In the discourse of these projects, local and global are often framed as complementary but distinct categories of people, institutions, traditions, and practices. But the history of biomedical research at the UVRI shows that these distinctions are unstable and mutable and that people and institutions have mobilized both categories to attract funding, professional prestige, and research opportunities. The book complicates the local/global binary that is implicit (and sometimes explicit) in many studies of colonial, international, and global health and medical research, especially in Africa. Moreover, it challenges assumptions about global health as an enterprise dominated by researchers based in the Global North and recenters the history of biomedicine in Africa.

This important book makes three valuable contributions. It sheds new light on the history of major medical conditions: Yellow Fever, Burkitt’s lymphoma, and HIV/AIDS. In addition, the book traces a series of conceptual transitions within transnational clinical research. Most importantly, its institutional and biographical approach reveals the frameworks and relationships which enabled Ugandans to repeatedly enhance, and challenge, global scientific knowledge.

-- Shane Doyle, author of Before HIV: Sexuality, Fertility, and Mortality in East Africa, 1900–

ISBN: 9780821425701

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

322 pages