Physicians, Colonial Racism, and Diaspora in West Africa

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Imagine that you are a physician born in British West Africa and cannot practice in your country. Or imagine that you are an African contemplating the study of medicine in Great Britain or an African with the medical degree in hand from a school in the United States. You hear about a British administrative action that will place you on a roster segregating you from your European, middle-class medical peers when you return to your country from Great Britain. Or, in another example from the United States, you learn that your medical training and degree are unacceptable to colonial authorities in your country of origin. This prohibitive policy will prevent you from making a living as a medical practitioner. The year is 1901 and colonialism is in full force; it marks the start of an era of restrictions and reduced opportunities for African medical professionals, a break from the previous century when African and West Indian physicians worked freely to protect the health of Africans and Europeans alike in West Africa.

Author(s): Adell Patton
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Year: 1996

Language: English
Commentary: scantailor optimized
Pages: 370
City: Gainesville
Tags: racism;colonialism;colonial history;medicine

Physicians, Colonial Racism, and Diaspora in West Africa
Contents
List of Figures, Maps, and Tables
Preface
Abbreviations
Introduction
PART ONE: Historical Background
1 African Physicians in Time Perspective
2 The Medical Profession in Africa from Ancient Times to 1800
PART TWO: Intraprofessional Conflict and ‘Professional Struggles
3 The Sierra Leone Nexus
4 The Easmon Episode
5 Colonial Medical Union and African Reaction
6 M.C.F. Easmon: Protectorate Clinician-Scholar
7 David Ekundayo Boye-Johnson and the Decolonization Era
8 African Physicians: From the Cold War to Perestroika
Epilogue
APPENDIX 1 Colonial List of Qualifying Foreign Medical Schools for the Medical Register
APPENDIX 2 West Africa’s Relations with the Soviet Bloc, July-September 1959
APPENDIX 3 Ghanaian Physicians Trained in the USSR and the Eastern Bloc, 1984
APPENDIX 4 Sierra Leone Doctors Trained in Soviet and Eastern- Bloc Universities, 1984 and 1967-76
Notes
Bibliography
Index