ISBN: HB: 9781787385498

Hurst Publishers

December 2021

304 pp.

23,4x15,6 cm

HB:
25.00 GBP
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International Campaign Against Leprosy

1948-2005

For sale in CIS only!

Examines how humanity has responded to the disease in the crucial second half of the twentieth century.

This book may offer a cautionary tale in the age of Covid-19. The narratives we shape around disease in society are so often about politics, and the competing versions of leprosy eradication's story are no exception.

In one telling, the extra-budgetary funding for anti-leprosy work came with unwarranted interference in the WHO programme, resulting in an over-hasty, acrimonious and ultimately unsuccessful elimination campaign. In another interpretation, a great work of twentieth-century disease control was accomplished, through extraordinary philanthropy, visionary courageousness, and wily and pragmatic diplomacy. In yet another, experienced, self-sacrificing anti-leprosy experts refused to abdicate their professional responsibilities to populist campaigns more concerned with statistics than people, which were risking patients' health with under-trialled drug therapies and irresponsibly entrusting medication to patients without supervision.

None of these bureaucratic, triumphalist or elitist narratives exists independently of the others. None is without credit, and none is to the complete credit of all involved. These competing stories offer uncanny resonances in the ongoing politics of public health, which have only intensified since both the emergence of M. Leprae millennia ago, and the concerted campaign against it in the last seventy years. What could the 'stories of leprosy' tell us about our pandemic response?

About the author

Jo Robertson (PhD, MA, Hons) worked on the International Leprosy Association's Global Project on the History of Leprosy at the University of Oxford, and conducted extensive research into the WHO leprosy archives at the University of Geneva. She most recently published on immigration, leprosy and nation. She now teaches casually in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Unit, University of Queensland.