Beschreibung
Von der Feldforschung zur Globalen Gesundheit – and back again ... Schweizer Wissenschaft und die Dekolonisierung Afrikas Wissenschaftliche Neugierde ist grenzenlos. Auch in der Schweiz. Das Schweizerische Tropeninstitut errichtete bereits in den frühen 1950er Jahren zwei Forschungslaboratorien in Afrika: das Centre Suisse de Recherches Scientifiques (CSRS) an der Côte d’Ivoire sowie das Swiss Tropical Institute Field Laboratory (STIFL) in Tansania. Das Buch erzählt die Geschichte der Schweizer Wissenschaft an diesen Schauplätzen. Es beschreibt den Wandel von einer auf die Schweiz bezogenen Wissenschaft zu einer aktiven Forschungspartnerschaft. After World War II, and especially during the decolonization era, Switzerland became more closely involved in African affairs. Swiss research institutions were established in both West and East Africa – the Centre Suisse de Recherches Scientifiques at Côte d’Ivoire and the Swiss Tropical Institute Field Laboratory in Tanganyika. Playing a key role in exchanges of individuals, ideas and objects between Switzerland and Africa, these institutions evolved into scientific hotspots, ultimately led by African scientists and deeply embedded within the local scientific systems. This volume analyzes the successive transformations and paradigm shifts of Swiss science in Africa – from the study of nature and collection of specimens, through development aspirations, to more recent research partnerships. By tracing this history from late colonialism to the period of development aid and structural adjustment, the work aims to contribute to a better understanding of the burgeoning field of global health. Aus dem Inhalt Introduction: Science, Medicine, and Decolonization Chapter 1: Decolonization, Development and Geographies of Knowledge Chapter 2: Switzerland in the World Chapter 3: Scientists in the Field Chapter 4: The Charitable Impulse: Development and Nutritional Research in Switzerland and Africa Chapter 5: The Empire Retreats: Medical Research, Development and the Rise of Social Medicine Chapter 6: The Transformation of Swiss Science in the Era of Structural Adjustment Chapter 7: The Governance of Malaria Research in Tanzania Epilogue: Science and Decolonization Revisited
Autorenportrait
Lukas Meier is a scientific collaborator at the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute. He studied History and Political Sciences at the Universities of Basel, Bern and Wisconsin Madison, receiving his PhD from the University of Basel in 2012. His research interests include African history and the history of science.