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La santé interculturelle, outil de domination ? L’expérience des sages-femmes traditionnelles mexicaines

Authors :
Mounia El Kotni
Source :
Anthropologie & Santé, Vol 24
Publisher :
Association Anthropologie Médicale Appliquée au Développement et à la Santé.

Abstract

Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Southern Mexico with traditional indigenous midwives, I offer a critical analysis of Mexican intercultural health policies through the example of the Chiapas intercultural hospital. Designed to reconcile biomedicine and traditional medicine, in practice the hospital resembles an empty shell, where traditional midwives are invited to practice without receiving any salary, under the biomedical gaze. Far from promoting indigenous medical knowledge, the intercultural hospital is both a place and a health policy that reproduce structural violence and racist bias against traditional midwives. This experiment highlights the need for a critical approach to interculturality, even more pressing as younger, professional midwives are hired to replace traditional midwives, who are pushed towards the margins of the Mexican healthcare system.

Details

Language :
French
ISSN :
21115028
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Anthropologie & Santé
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.299be8c980b41ecbc8394711f43de99
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4000/anthropologiesante.10628