Clare Herrick’s research while affiliated with King's College London and other places

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Publications (3)


Figure 1. Alcohol consumption in Botswana, 1990-2010, in liters per person per year. Source: World Health Organization Global Information System on Alcohol and Health (2015). (Color figure available online.)
Global Health, Geographical Contingency, and Contingent Geographies
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April 2016

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223 Reads

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34 Citations

Clare Herrick

Health geography has emerged from under the “shadow of the medical” to become one of the most vibrant of all the subdisciplines. Yet, this success has also meant that health research has become increasingly siloed within this subdisciplinary domain. As this article explores, this represents a potential lost opportunity with regard to the study of global health, which has instead come to be dominated by anthropology and political science. Chief among the former’s concerns are exploring the gap between the programmatic intentions of global health and the unintended or unanticipated consequences of their deployment. This article asserts that recent work on contingency within geography offers significant conceptual potential for examining this gap. It therefore uses the example of alcohol taxation in Botswana, an emergent global health target and tool, to explore how geographical contingency and the emergent, contingent geographies that result might help counter the prevailing tendency for geography to be sidestepped within critical studies of global health. At the very least, then, this intervention aims to encourage reflection by geographers on how to make explicit the all-too-often implicit links between their research and global health debates located outside the discipline.

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Citations (1)


... In line with this, several new technologies have been developed to enhance biosafety within the global travel industry (such as the European Digital COVID Certificate), underlining the need for biosecurity risk management in urban contexts (Ingram 2005, Herrick 2016, Melly and Hanrrahan 2020. The biosecuritization of urban tourist destinations (Garcia-Ruiz et al. 2021) emerges as indispensable for the short and mid-term survival and recovery of key economic sectors of world urban tourist destinations during and after the pandemic (United Nations 2020). ...

Reference:

The Biosecuritization of the Tourist City: Some Reflections from and about Lisbon Nightlife
Global Health, Geographical Contingency, and Contingent Geographies