导航威权政治:对医疗保健研究的反射框架。

IF 5.9 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Marit Tolo Østebø, Kenneth Maes, Gabrielle Gibb, Rebecca Henderson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:北方全球健康学者在其他国家的研究中如何驾驭威权政治背景?这个问题激发了本文所依据的研究项目。在十个多月的时间里,我们对16位欧洲和北美学者进行了深入的定性访谈,他们在一个专制国家从事与健康相关的研究,我们称之为帕特里亚。结果:我们所有的受访者都承认健康是一个政治问题,并承认在全球健康研究中考虑政治的重要性。然而,他们不愿意在他们的研究中明确地整合政治敏感话题和讨论与当地政治背景相关的问题。为了获得和保持访问权限,并在政治敏感和专制的背景下保护自己和他们的当地合作者,研究人员采用了“框架”的做法。这些策略包括避免使用带有政治色彩的术语、学术参考文献和问题;战略性地遵循假定的非政治语言和卫生研究方法,并在研究传播和写作过程中与当地同行进行谈判并依靠他们。结论:利用框架理论和实地调查和权威主义的文献,我们讨论了我们的发现不仅对全球健康研究,而且对更广泛的医疗保健科学的影响。虽然在专制政权中工作的研究人员可能特别容易参与框架实践,但我们的受访者使用的策略并不局限于在这种环境中工作的全球卫生研究人员。作为在包括美国在内的多个国家从事健康研究的人类学家,我们从我们自己的研究中认识到我们的对话者使用的策略。通过对政治因素影响我们研究的一些方式的讨论,我们提出了政治反身性在健康研究中的价值的论点:对指导我们研究的想当然的前提和规范进行批判性审查,以及对塑造我们研究的政治环境和权力动态进行批判性审查。在卫生研究中转向政治反身性可以解开一些默认的假设、偏见、规范和实践,这些是卫生保健科学不可或缺的一部分,学生和研究人员必须批判性地思考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Navigating authoritarian politics: towards reflexive framing in healthcare research.

Background: How do Northern Global Health scholars navigate authoritarian political contexts in their research in other countries? This question motivated the research project on which this article is based. Over ten months, we conducted in-depth qualitative interviews with sixteen European and North American scholars who were engaged in health-related research in an authoritarian country we refer to as Patria.

Results: All our interviewees recognized health as a political matter and acknowledged the importance of considering politics in Global Health research. Yet, they were reluctant to explicitly integrate politically sensitive topics and discuss questions related to local political context in their research. To gain and maintain access, and to protect themselves and their local collaborators in a politically sensitive and authoritarian context, the researchers employed practices of 'framing'. Such strategies included avoiding terms, scholarly references, and questions that were politically loaded; strategically conforming to the assumed apolitical language and methodologies of health research, and negotiating with and leaning on their local counterparts in processes of research dissemination and writing.

Conclusion: Drawing on frame theory and literature on fieldwork and authoritarianism we discuss the implications our findings have, not only for Global Health research, but for healthcare sciences more broadly. While researchers who work in authoritarian regimes may be particularly prone to engage in practices of framing, the strategies our interviewees used are not limited to Global Health researchers working in such settings. As anthropologists with experience researching health in multiple countries, including in the United States, we recognize the strategies that our interlocutors used from our own research. By including a discussion of some of the ways political factors have shaped our research we make an argument for the value of political reflexivity in health research: the critical scrutiny of the taken-for-granted presuppositions and norms that guide our research, and of the political environments and power dynamics that shape and are shaped by our research. A turn to political reflexivity in health research can unravel some of the tacit assumptions, biases, norms and practices that are integral to the health care sciences and which students and researchers must critically think about.

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来源期刊
Globalization and Health
Globalization and Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
18.40
自引率
1.90%
发文量
93
期刊介绍: "Globalization and Health" is a pioneering transdisciplinary journal dedicated to situating public health and well-being within the dynamic forces of global development. The journal is committed to publishing high-quality, original research that explores the impact of globalization processes on global public health. This includes examining how globalization influences health systems and the social, economic, commercial, and political determinants of health. The journal welcomes contributions from various disciplines, including policy, health systems, political economy, international relations, and community perspectives. While single-country studies are accepted, they must emphasize global/globalization mechanisms and their relevance to global-level policy discourse and decision-making.
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