Doctors, Borders, and Life in Crisis

TitleDoctors, Borders, and Life in Crisis
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsRedfield, Peter
JournalCultural Anthropology
Volume20
Issue3
Pagination328-361
ISSN1548-1360
Abstract

The politics of life and death is explored from the perspective of Doctors Without Borders (Médecins sans frontières [MSF]), an activist nongovernmental organization explicitly founded to respond to health crises on a global scale. Following the work of Michel Foucault and Giorgio Agamben, I underline key intersections between MSF's operations that express concern for human life in the midst of humanitarian disaster and the group's self-proclaimed ethic of engaged refusal. Adopting the analytic frame of biopolitics, I suggest that the actual practice of medical humanitarian organizations in crisis settings presents a fragmentary and uncertain form of such power, extended beyond stable sovereignty and deployed within a restricted temporal horizon.

URLhttps://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1525/can.2005.20.3.328
DOI10.1525/can.2005.20.3.328
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