References
- Abrahams, Y. (2000). Colonialism, dysfunction and disjuncture: The historiography of Sarah Bartmann [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Cape Town. https://open.uct.ac.za/handle/11427/10012
- Digby, A. (2006). Diversity and division in medicine: Health care in South Africa from the 1800s. Peter Lang AG.
- Farmer, P. (2003). Pathologies of power: Health, human rights, and the new war on the poor (1st ed.). University of California Press.
- Hamdy, S., & Nye, C. (2019). Comics and revolution as global public health intervention: The Case of Lissa. Global Public Health. https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2019.1682632
- Kenworthy, N., Thormann, M., & Parker, R. (2018). From a global crisis to the ‘end of AIDS’: New epidemics of signification. Global Public Health, 13(8), 960–971. https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2017.1365373
- Legassick, M., Rassool, C., & Museum, S. A. (2015). Skeletons in the cupboard: South African museums and the train in human remains 1907–1917. Iziko Museums.
- Mbali, M. (2020). African achievers, structural barriers and the ‘End of AIDS’. In U. Pirker, K. Hericks, & M. Mbali (Eds.), Forward, upward, onward? Narratives of achievement in African and Afroeuropean contexts (pp. 79–86). Heinrich Heine University Books.
- Mofokeng, T. (2022). Report by the Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health – Racism and the right to health (A/77/197). United Nations General Assembly. https://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N22/432/64/PDF/N2243264.pdf?OpenElement
- Mojola, S. A., & Angotti, N. (2019). ‘Sometimes it is not about men’: Gendered and generational discourses of caregiving HIV transmission in a rural South African setting. Global Public Health. https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2019.1606265
- Olirus Owilli, A., Voller, V. K., Martin, W., Compton, R. M., & Westerhaus, M. (2022). Beyond witnesses: Moving health workers towards analysis and action on social determinants of health. World Medical & Health Policy, 14(1), 74–90. https://doi.org/10.1002/wmh3.493
- Olusanya, J. O., Ubogu, O. I., Njokanma, F. O., & Olusanya, B. O. (2021). Transforming global health through equity-driven funding. Nature Medicine, 27(7), 1136–1138. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-021-01422-6
- Oni-Orisan, A. (2017). Church and (re)birth: Legacies of Christianity for maternal care in Nigeria. Transforming Anthropology, 25(2), 120–129. https://doi.org/10.1111/traa.12099
- Packard, R. M. (1989). White plague, black labor: Tuberculosis and the political economy of health and disease in South Africa. University of California Press.
- Reed, J. C. (2018). Landscapes of activism: Civil society, HIV and AIDS care in Northern Mozambique. Rutgers University Press.
- Rucell, J. (2018). Ethical review and the social powerlessness of data: Reflections from a study of violence in South Africa’s reproductive health system. In C. I. Macleod, J. Marx, P. Mnyaka, & G. J. Treharne (Eds.), The Palgrave handbook of ethics in critical research (pp. 291–306). Palgrave Macmillan.
- Salmen, C. R., Magerenge, R., Ndunyu, L., & Prasad, S. (2019) Rethinking our Rigor Mortis: Creating space for more adaptive and inclusive truth-seeking in community-based global health research in Kenya. Global Public Health. https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2019.1629609
- Sathyamala, C. (2019). In the name of science: Ethical violations in the ECHO randomised trial. Global Public Health. https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2019.1634118
- Swanson, M. (1977). The sanitation syndrome: Bubonic plague and urban native policy in the Cape colony, 1900–1909. Journal of African History, 18(3), 387–410. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021853700027328
- Vaughan, M. (1991). Curing their ills: Colonial power and African illness. Stanford University Press.