Synopses & Reviews
Reproduction, Globalization, and the State conceptualizes and puts into practice a global anthropology of reproduction and reproductive health. Leading anthropologists offer new perspectives on how transnational migration and global flows of communications, commodities, and biotechnologies affect the reproductive lives of women and men in diverse societies throughout the world. Based on research in Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Western Europe, their fascinating ethnographies provide insight into reproduction and reproductive health broadly conceived to encompass population control, HIV/AIDS, assisted reproductive technologies, paternity tests, sex work, and humanitarian assistance. The contributors address the methodological challenges of research on globalization, including ways of combining fine-grained ethnography with analyses of large-scale political, economic, and ideological forces. Their essays reveal complex interactions among global and state population policies and politics; public health, human rights, and feminist movements; diverse medical systems; various religious practices, doctrines, and institutions; and intimate relationships and individual aspirations.
Contributors. Aditya Bharadwaj, Caroline H. Bledsoe, Carole H. Browner, Junjie Chen, Aimee R. Eden, Susan L. Erikson, Didier Fassin, Claudia Lee Williams Fonseca, Ellen Gruenbaum, Matthew Gutmann, Marcia C. Inhorn, Mark B. Padilla, Rayna Rapp, Lisa Ann Richey, Carolyn Sargent, Papa Sow, Cecilia Van Hollen, Linda Whiteford
Review
andldquo;This welcome, timely collection illuminates the rapidly transforming landscape of reproduction worldwide by bringing together case studies by outstanding ethnographers known for their research on reproduction. Each contributor demonstrates an impressive grip on local circumstances, while also showing how those circumstances are inevitably shaped by state policies or inaction. The editorsandrsquo; introduction explains the sophisticated theoretical and methodological approaches brought to bear throughout the collection, and Rayna Rappandrsquo;s foreword and Didier Fassinandrsquo;s epilogue sharpen the framework of a book that will set the standard for research on reproduction and globalization for the next decade.andrdquo;andmdash;Faye Ginsburg, co-editor of Conceiving the New World Order: The Global Politics of Reproduction
Review
andldquo;Building on Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rappandrsquo;s pathbreaking work, Carole H. Browner and Carolyn F. Sargentandrsquo;s Reproduction, Globalization, and the State situates anthropological approaches to globalizing and gendered practices, politics, and policies of reproduction firmly in the twenty-first century. This rich collection of multisited studies contributes to multidisciplinary approaches to global ethnography and will enliven debates in research and teaching alike.andrdquo;andmdash;Gail Kligman, author of The Politics of Duplicity: Controlling Reproduction in Ceauand#351;escuandrsquo;s Romania
Review
andldquo;These fascinating and provocative essays represent some of the most exciting scholarship on the anthropology of reproduction.andrdquo;andmdash;Lynn M. Morgan, author of Icons of Life: A Cultural History of Human Embryos
Review
andldquo;
Reproduction, Globalization, and the State is an important contribution to global debates on reproductive health and rights, since it serves as a
welcome reminder that reproduction, despite its universality as a central feature of human societies, never takes place in a vacuum.andrdquo;
Review
andldquo;The themes presented in this volume are highly topical; the complexities of studying the local and the global, the micro and the macro, are well illustrated; and the theoretical notions the chapters build on are clearly explained. These three qualities, together with a thought-provoking foreword by Rayna Rapp and epilogue by Didier Fassin, make this volume highly recommendable for academics and others interested in the field of reproduction and globalization.andrdquo;
Review
andldquo;This book is not only geographically wide ranging but it also encompasses many aspects of human reproductionandhellip;. Browner and Sargent have found room in this volume for scholarship on many diverse aspects of individualsandrsquo; reproductive journeys. . . . These aspects make it a refreshing, illuminating and diverse read[andhellip;]andhellip; At a point where concerns over the availability of funding for the social sciences are paramount, this book reminds us of the importance of social science research regarding men and womenandrsquo;s reproductive lives.andrdquo;
Review
andldquo;This is a diverse and unique collection of ethnographies that illustrates the various complexities of reproduction and reproductive health for women and men. The strength of the volume is the attempt to conceptualize human agency and the exploration of how reproduction in varying communities are influenced by global and state institutions, policies, ideologies, and biotechnology.andrdquo;
Review
It is refreshing to find a well-written, cohesive edited volume. . . . Professionals and students alike should find this work appealing; it can serve as an introduction to pivotal issues in the field, yet also delves into key theoretical concepts and methodological approaches in health policy, gender studies, public health, and anthropology. The book is theoretically rich without being overly dense, and this winning combination stands
a good chance of bringing anthropological theory and methods into the boardrooms of policymakers.andrdquo;
Synopsis
Collection uses ethnographies of globalization to explore the consequences of interactions between global processes and national structures on human reproduction and reproductive health in a range of contexts.
Synopsis
Anthropologists offer new perspectives on how transnational migration and global flows of communications, commodities, and biotechnologies affect the reproductive lives of women and men in diverse societies throughout the world.
About the Author
“Reproduction, Globalization, and the State situates anthropological approaches to globalizing and gendered practices, politics, and policies of reproduction firmly in the twenty-first century. Building on Ginsburg and Rapp’s earlier pathbreaking work, Carole H. Browner and Carolyn F. Sargent’s welcome edited volume emphasizes the gendered dimensions-female and male-of reproduction ‘as a global process.’ This volume rich in multi-sited studies also contributes conceptually and methodologically to multi-disciplinary approaches to global ethnography and will enliven debates in research and teaching alike.”—Gail Kligman, co-author of The Politics of Gender After Socialism“This new volume is a welcome and timely addition to the rapidly transforming landscape of reproduction worldwide. While each author has an impressive grip on local circumstances, they also show how those are—inevitably—shaped by state policies or inaction. Bringing sophisticated approaches to theory and method that are helpfully elaborated in the editors’ introduction, the 14 cases—written by many of the outstanding researchers known for their ethnographic research on reproduction—cover the planet, from China to India to Sudan, while exploring many of the key topics of our time, from assisted reproductive technologies to sex work, fetal diagnosis, and humanitarian assistance. The Foreword by Rayna Rapp and Epilogue by Didier Fassin sharpen the framework for a book that will set the standard for research on reproduction and globalization relevant to anthropology, women’s studies, and sociology for the next decade.”—Faye Ginsburg, co-editor of Conceiving the New World Order: The Global Politics of Reproduction