Description
Book SynopsisDoctors beyond Borders provides an essential historical perspective on the transnational migration of health care practitioners.
Trade Review‘The audience of this excellent collection of essays ought to include: medical, labour, and economic historians; scholars specializing in imperial, global, and migration studies; and health policy analysts. This book should also end up on undergraduate and graduate reading lists across many fields.’ -- J.T.H. Connors * Canadian Journal of History vol 52:03:2017 *
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Doctors Beyond Borders: Entanglements and Intersections in the Modern History of Medical Migration (Laurence Monnais and David Wright) Imperial Connections and Caribbean Medicine, 1900-1938 (Juanita De Barros) Pathways of Perseverance: Medical Refugee Flights to Australia and New Zealand, 1933-1945 (John Weaver) Public Health and Persecution: Debates on the Possible Migration of Jewish Physicians to Sweden from Nazi Germany (Annika Berg) "A Mysterious Discrimination": Irish Medical Emigration to the United States in the 1950s (Greta Jones) A System of Exclusion: New Zealand Women Medical Specialists in International Medical Networks, 1945-75 (John Armstrong) From Zebra to Motorbike. Transnational Trajectories of South Asian Doctors in East Africa, c. 1870-1970 (Margret Frenz) Draft Doctors: The Impact of the Vietnam War on the Migration of Foreign Doctors to Canada (David Wright, Alex Ketchum and Gregory Marks) "Without racism there would be no geriatrics": South Asian Overseas-trained Doctors and the Development of Geriatric Medicine in the UK - 1950-2000 (Parvati Raghuram, Joanna Bornat and Leroi Henry) Providing 'Special' Types of Labour and Exerting Agency: How Migrant Doctors Have Shaped the UK's National Health Service (Julian M Simpson, Stephanie J. Snow and Aneez Esmail) Connecting to Canada: Experiences of the South Asian Medical Diaspora during the 1960s and 1970s (Sasha Mullally and David Wright)