African Voices in Global Health

Created 18 Mar 2024 | 6 articles

This special issue explores Africans' self-understood roles - and voices - in global health (as both researchers and interlocutors in relation to various global health institutions/policies). We argue that the special issue's focus on African voices in global health is critical in view of the legacies of colonial medicine and public health for contemporary narratives, discourses, and practices. It is important to acknowledge that Africans continue to address the structural injustices facing them in relation to global health policies and practices on the continent. In the face of this they have demanded that donors, NGOs, governments, and intergovernmental organisations be politically, fiscally, and ethically accountable to the people they serve on the continent. As the special issue highlights, critical scholars of global health based in Africa are increasingly offering challenges to the frequent positioning of African patients and study-participants as either invisible, or disempowered, in understanding and shaping their own lived experiences of health in a transnational context.

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Editorial

Originally published in Global Public Health, Volume: 17, Number: 12 (02 Dec 2022)

Published online: 23 Nov 2022
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Article

Originally published in Global Public Health, Volume: 17, Number: 12 (02 Dec 2022)

Published online: 23 Oct 2019
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Article

Originally published in Global Public Health, Volume: 17, Number: 12 (02 Dec 2022)

Published online: 24 Jun 2019
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