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MALARIA - DISEASE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124294


Patriotic hygiene: tracing new places of knowledge production about malaria in Vietnam, 1919-75 / Aso, Michitake   Journal Article
Aso, Michitake Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article examines knowledge production about malaria in colonial and postcolonial Vietnam. During the 1920s and 1930s, medical doctors cooperated with plantation managers in order to develop industrial hygiene techniques consisting of environmental modification and quinine use. By the 1930s, changing motivations, in particular racial hygiene and patriotism, drove malaria control efforts. The wartime pressures to control malaria between the 1940s and 1975 further encouraged patriotic hygiene. This history of malaria science in Vietnam highlights the tension between change and continuity and shows the importance of place in the conjunction of scientific knowledge production and nation-building projects.
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2
ID:   131010


Politics and parasites: the contribution of corruption to human misery / Siverson, Randolph M; Johnson, Richard A.I   Journal Article
Siverson, Randolph M Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract We address the consequences of corruption within a state on the extent to which populations have shortened life expectancy due to political corruption. Using three variables to estimate corruption, the results support the expectation that corruption increases average disability shortened life years (DALY). The results persist when estimating the model including measures of deaths from civil war and the number of bordering states experiencing civil war, both previously shown to have an effect on DALY, although these two variables are not statistically significant in our models. While the estimated effects of the corruption variables continue to capture much of the variation in DALY for a global group of nations, they completely fail to explain any variation in Sub-Saharan African states, probably because of the devastating effects of AIDS and malaria in that region. Finally, we discuss why this failure occurs and discuss the implications of our results.
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