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dc.contributor.author
Luxardo, Natalia  
dc.date.available
2025-02-06T11:32:18Z  
dc.date.issued
2024-12  
dc.identifier.citation
Luxardo, Natalia; Collaborative ethnography and a call for pluralism and dialogic knowledge in health equity debates and global cancer research culture; Taylor & Francis; Anthropology & Medicine; 2024; 12-2024; 1-18  
dc.identifier.issn
1364-8470  
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/11336/253682  
dc.description.abstract
Scholars in medical anthropology note that, despite more than 25 years of anthropological studies on cancer, much of this scholarship remains marginal in mainstream public health approaches. This paper examines social practices, biases, and unnoticed assumptions in mainstream global health research culture that prevents anthropology from having a more influential role in cancer research and policy agendas. It focuses on the day-to-day, ordinary, micro academic practices in which differential power distribution exacerbates inequity within the field, ignoring the role played by approaches with disciplinarian, epistemological and geopolitical peripheries. Inspired by a Bourdieusian epistemic reflexivity, this autoethnography systematized and analyzed through decolonial lenses some deterrents within real-world-research practices, including as the corpus own studies on cancer and inequalities studies that were based on collaborative ethnography (2013–2024). Six categories account for such deterrents in the global field: 1) Public health mainstream-centrism and the lack of recognition of anthropological knowledge principles; 2) Restrictive conception of ethics; 3) Similis Simili Gaudet biases – to be inclined to select what is alike; 4) Ethnocentric and naïve assumptions in relation to the road from evidence to practice; 5) Unconsidered dimensions of collaborations: Strengthening citizenship; 6) The moral economy of (only) professional trajectories interests and hidden priorities. It concludes by noting that anthropology has a lot to provide in the search for a genuinely democratic, plural, and decentralized knowledge in global cancer equity debates strengthening paradigms of dialogue, still so fragile and invisible in the field of cancer and public health in general.  
dc.format
application/pdf  
dc.language.iso
eng  
dc.publisher
Taylor & Francis  
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess  
dc.rights.uri
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ar/  
dc.subject
Collaborative Ethnography  
dc.subject
Inequities  
dc.subject
Cancer  
dc.subject
Geopolitics  
dc.subject.classification
Ciencias Sociales Interdisciplinarias  
dc.subject.classification
Otras Ciencias Sociales  
dc.subject.classification
CIENCIAS SOCIALES  
dc.title
Collaborative ethnography and a call for pluralism and dialogic knowledge in health equity debates and global cancer research culture  
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article  
dc.type
info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo  
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion  
dc.date.updated
2025-02-03T13:34:45Z  
dc.identifier.eissn
1469-2910  
dc.journal.volume
2024  
dc.journal.pagination
1-18  
dc.journal.pais
Reino Unido  
dc.journal.ciudad
Londres  
dc.description.fil
Fil: Luxardo, Natalia. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Instituto de Investigaciones "Gino Germani"; Argentina  
dc.journal.title
Anthropology & Medicine  
dc.relation.alternativeid
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/url/https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13648470.2024.2416806  
dc.relation.alternativeid
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13648470.2024.2416806