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  1. The course of professionalization: Jewish nursing in Poland in the interwar period.Rakefet Zalashik & Nadav Davidovitch - 2019 - Science in Context 32 (1):93-109.
    ArgumentThis paper focuses on the Jewish nursing profession in Poland during the interwar period. We argue that the integration of Jewish women in medical activity under the AJDC (American Jewish Distribution Committee) and TOZ (Towarzystwa Ochrony Zdrowia Ludności Żydowskiej [the Society for the Protection of the Health of the Jewish People]) emerged in Poland less from the adoption of gender equality and more out of necessity. On the one hand, JDC and TOZ needed Jewish nurses and public health nurses to (...)
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  • An overloaded ark? The Rockefeller foundation and refugee medical scientists, 1933-45.P. Weindling - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 31 (3):477-489.
  • An overloaded ark? The Rockefeller Foundation and refugee medical scientists, 1933–45.Paul Weindling - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 31 (3):477-489.
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  • The Rockefeller Foundation and Central Europe: a Reconsideration. [REVIEW]Benhamin B. Page - 2002 - Minerva 40 (3):265-287.
    This paper argues that the health-related work of the RockefellerFoundation in Central Europe following the First World War flowed not somuch from geopolitical concerns as from the Foundation's ambition tocreate a global network in scientific medicine. It examines theassumptions and values that underpinned this project, and indicates someof the questions that these pose for today's world.
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  • Global biopolitics and the history of world health.Alison Bashford - 2006 - History of the Human Sciences 19 (1):67-88.
    Many scholars have historicized biopolitics with reference to the emergence of sovereign nations and their colonial extensions over the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. This article begins to conceptualize and trace the history of biopolitics beyond the nation, arguing that the history of world health - the great 20th-century reach of 19th-century health and hygiene - should be understood as a vital politics of population on a newly large field of play. This substantive history of world health and world population (...)
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