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AGEM

Willkom­men bei der Arbeits­ge­mein­schaft Eth­nolo­gie und Medi­zin (AGEM)
Die AGEM ist ein 1970 gegrün­de­ter gemein­nütziger Vere­in mit dem Ziel, die Zusam­me­nar­beit zwis­chen der Medi­zin, den angren­zen­den Natur­wis­senschaften und den Kultur‑, Geistes- und Sozial­wis­senschaften zu fördern und dadurch das Studi­um des inter­diszi­plinären Arbeits­felds Eth­nolo­gie und Medi­zin zu intensivieren.

Was wir tun

  1. Her­aus­gabe der Zeitschrift Curare
  2. Durch­führung von Tagungen
  3. Doku­men­ta­tion von Lit­er­atur und Informationen

Curare
Zeitschrift für Medizinethnologie

aktuelle Aus­gabe | Archiv aller Aus­gabenCall for Papers

Veranstaltungen

16. März 2026

Edinburgh Student Medical Anthropology Conference

Work­shop

At Edin­burgh Cen­tre for Med­ical Anthropology

Stu­dent Med­ical Anthro­pol­o­gy Conference
Edin­burgh Cen­tre for Med­ical Anthropology

First week of May 2026

After the suc­cess of last year’s con­fer­ence, the Stu­dents of Med­ical Anthro­pol­o­gy at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Edin­burgh will be hold­ing our annu­al stu­dent-focussed event in the first week of May 2026. With the rise of AI tech­nol­o­gy and the real­i­ties of liv­ing in the infor­ma­tion age, this year we are call­ing for all things Tech­nocene. This could be dig­i­tal ethno­gra­phies, using dig­i­tal tools to improve pub­lic access to research, a thought piece on the place of anthro­pol­o­gy in the cur­rent world, etc.

Stu­dents can get involved by sim­ply attend­ing, a 3–5 minute light­ning talk or a longer pre­sen­ta­tion about their interest/research, or get­ting involved in plan­ning a work­shop. It’ll be a great oppor­tu­ni­ty for stu­dents (and staff!) to net­work and hear about one another’s research. Please use this attached form to reg­is­ter your inter­est, and any fur­ther updates will be sent via email. Reg­is­tra­tion will be open until Mon­day 16th March.

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16. März 2026

Robots for Care: Exploring Downstream Socio-Ethical Effects & Upstream Interventions

Work­shop

Hybrid and inter­ac­tive workshop

Call for papers: Robots for Care: Explor­ing Down­stream Socio-Eth­i­cal Effects & Upstream Inter­ven­tions, Work­shop @ HRI 2026

🗓️ Sub­mis­sion dead­line: Feb­ru­ary 9, 2026 (AoE)
🗓️ Work­shop date: March 16, 2026, Morn­ing GMT
🙌 Work­shop for­mat: Hybrid and interactive
🔗 Work­shop web­site: https://healthrobotsworkshop.github.io

This is an invi­ta­tion for con­tri­bu­tions to the work­shop „Robots for Care: Explor­ing Down­stream Socio-Eth­i­cal Effects and Upstream Inter­ven­tions” held in con­junc­tion with the ACM/IEEE Inter­na­tion­al Con­fer­ence on Human–Robot Inter­ac­tion (HRI 2026).

The con­text: Robots hold poten­tial to expand acces­si­bil­i­ty to dis­abled com­mu­ni­ties, such as by pro­vid­ing phys­i­cal or cog­ni­tive assis­tance, and enabling new ways of par­tic­i­pat­ing in social activ­i­ties. They also can sup­port health­care work­ers with ancil­lary tasks and care deliv­ery, to sup­port them work­ing at the top of their license. How­ev­er, the real-world deploy­ment of robots across these con­texts can cre­ate social, eth­i­cal, and orga­ni­za­tion­al chal­lenges (e.g., down­stream effects). They may under­mine the agency of dis­abled peo­ple, dis­rupt care deliv­ery, shift roles, and dis­place labor.

Our aim: Bring togeth­er mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary stake­hold­ers to exam­ine these down­stream effects and explore how they might be mit­i­gat­ed through upstream inter­ven­tions of design, research, and policy.

How to con­tribute: We wel­come short con­tri­bu­tions dis­cussing top­ics rel­e­vant to the work­shop. Top­ics include, but are not lim­it­ed to:

Eth­i­cal, legal, and social impli­ca­tions of robots in clin­i­cal or assis­tive contexts
Crit­i­cal reflec­tions on mis/alignments between design goals and impacts of robots on dis­abled communities
Upstream inter­ven­tions at the meso or macro lev­el (e.g., com­mu­ni­ty pro­grams, par­tic­i­pa­to­ry research, policies)
Com­mu­ni­ty-based research practices
Expe­ri­ence reports or deploy­ment insights from con­texts including:

Social­ly assis­tive robots

Cog­ni­tive­ly assis­tive robots
Phys­i­cal­ly assis­tive robots
Hos­pi­tal deployed robots (e.g., deliv­ery, san­i­ta­tion, surgery)
Reha­bil­i­ta­tion robotics

We par­tic­u­lar­ly encour­age sub­mis­sions that sur­face lived expe­ri­ences, or cross-dis­ci­pli­nary insights that may be under­rep­re­sent­ed in tra­di­tion­al aca­d­e­m­ic venues.

Writ­ten sub­mis­sions will be post­ed on our web­site, and pre­sent­ed inter­ac­tive­ly dur­ing a poster ses­sion. There will also be oppor­tu­ni­ties to con­tribute to a fol­low-up jour­nal spe­cial issue.

Poten­tial Atten­dees: We encour­age aca­d­e­mics, non-aca­d­e­mics, and peo­ple with/without affil­i­a­tions to par­tic­i­pate in the work­shop. Sub­mit­ting a paper is not manda­to­ry to attend. The work­shop is designed to be inter­ac­tive and par­tic­i­pa­to­ry, and we are inter­est­ed in wel­com­ing peo­ple from many back­grounds. The work­shop will be hybrid to sup­port accessibility.

We appre­ci­ate your help in shar­ing this work­shop with rel­e­vant parties.

✉️ Con­tact: healthrobotsworkshop@gmail.com

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27. März 2026

Helen Knowles in Conversation with Deborah Elenter on Puérpera

Vor­trag

UK Book Launch

Puér­pera UK Book Launch — Deb­o­rah Elen­ter in Con­ver­sa­tion with Helen Knowles
Fri­day 27 March 2026, 5.00–6.30pm (arrivals from 5pm)
Women’s Art Library, Spe­cial Collections
Goldsmiths
Uni­ver­si­ty of London
New Cross, SE14 6NW London

Free (book­ing essential)

Book­ing site

ABOUT THIS EVENT

Join us for the UK launch of Puér­pera, a pow­er­ful pho­to­book by Mon­te­v­ideo-born visu­al artist, pho­tog­ra­ph­er and doula Deb­o­rah Elen­ter, pub­lished by the Cen­tro de Fotografía de Montevideo.

Since 2015, Elen­ter has been doc­u­ment­ing the expe­ri­ences of peo­ple giv­ing birth — work that con­fronts the his­tor­i­cal invis­i­bil­i­ty of child­birth in con­tem­po­rary art, reclaim­ing it as a vital, polit­i­cal and col­lec­tive expe­ri­ence. Under her lens, the birthing room becomes a polit­i­cal space, and the act of birth part of the col­lec­tive strug­gle of fem­i­nism. Hav­ing launched at La Fábri­ca Book­store in Madrid and at Košice Uni­ver­si­ty in Slo­va­kia, we are hon­oured to host the UK edi­tion at the Women’s Art Library.

The evening will fea­ture a con­ver­sa­tion between Deb­o­rah Elen­ter and Helen Knowles, Direc­tor and Cura­tor of the Birth Rites Col­lec­tion, chaired by Dr Althea Greenan, Cura­tor of the Women’s Art Library. The dis­cus­sion will explore birth, pho­tog­ra­phy, the body and the pol­i­tics of mak­ing vis­i­ble what has long been ren­dered invisible.

As part of this event, Deb­o­rah Elen­ter has gen­er­ous­ly donat­ed an edi­tion of Puér­pera along­side a framed pho­to­graph­ic work to the Birth Rites Col­lec­tion, and a fur­ther copy of the pho­to­book to the Women’s Art Library. In turn, the Birth Rites Col­lec­tion will gift a selec­tion of his­tor­i­cal pam­phlets, fliers and doc­u­men­ta­tion of its work since 2009 to the Women’s Art Library — a fit­ting exchange between two col­lec­tions com­mit­ted to pre­serv­ing and mak­ing vis­i­ble the expe­ri­ences of women.

Books will be avail­able for pur­chase and sign­ing after the talk.

SPEAKER BIOS

Deb­o­rah Elen­ter is a Mon­te­v­ideo-born visu­al artist, pho­tog­ra­ph­er and doula. Since 2015 she has doc­u­ment­ed over 150 births, pro­duc­ing inti­mate and unflinch­ing images that reclaim child­birth as a vital, polit­i­cal and col­lec­tive expe­ri­ence. Her project Puér­pera has been exhib­it­ed at the Uruguayan Con­tem­po­rary Art Muse­um, Espa­cio de Arte Con­tem­porá­neo, and Hipere­s­pa­cio in Mon­te­v­ideo, and received inter­na­tion­al recog­ni­tion includ­ing awards from Uruguay’s Direc­ción Nacional de Cul­tura and the Fun­dación Itaú Cul­tur­al. Her pho­to­book Puér­pera, pub­lished by the Cen­tro de Fotografía de Mon­te­v­ideo, launched in 2025. Along­side her pho­to­graph­ic prac­tice, Elen­ter col­lab­o­rates on Uruguay’s pro­posed Dig­ni­fied Birth legislation.

Dr Althea Greenan is Cura­tor of the Women’s Art Library at Gold­smiths, Uni­ver­si­ty of Lon­don. She has worked with the col­lec­tion since 1989, first as a vol­un­teer with the Women Artists’ Slide Library and then as cura­tor when the col­lec­tion was gift­ed to Gold­smiths in 2002. Her work posi­tions the archive in con­tem­po­rary prac­tice, sup­port­ing artists and researchers in devel­op­ing new projects from its hold­ings. She has writ­ten wide­ly on women’s art prac­tice and fem­i­nist archiv­ing, pub­lish­ing in aca­d­e­m­ic jour­nals, art mag­a­zines and edit­ed vol­umes. She has spo­ken at the Roy­al Acad­e­my, CCA Glas­gow, Som­er­set House and internationally.

Helen Knowles is a British artist, film­mak­er and cura­tor, and Direc­tor of the Birth Rites Col­lec­tion — the only con­tem­po­rary art col­lec­tion inter­na­tion­al­ly ded­i­cat­ed to child­birth and mater­nal expe­ri­ence. Found­ed in 2008, the col­lec­tion com­pris­es over 120 art­works by artists includ­ing Judy Chica­go, Himali Singh Soin, and Court­ney Con­rad. Knowles’s own work has been exhib­it­ed at the Mori Art Muse­um, ZKM Karl­sruhe, Ars Elec­tron­i­ca, Zablu­dow­icz Col­lec­tion and Kun­sthaus Graz, and is held by the Whit­worth, Tate, and the Vic­to­ria and Albert Muse­um. She was award­ed a PhD from Northum­bria Uni­ver­si­ty in 2025.

ABOUT THE BIRTH RITES COLLECTION

The Birth Rites Col­lec­tion is the only con­tem­po­rary art col­lec­tion ded­i­cat­ed to child­birth, repro­duc­tion and mater­nal expe­ri­ence in the world. Found­ed in 2008 by artist and cura­tor Helen Knowles, it com­pris­es over 120 works by artists includ­ing Judy Chica­go, Himali Singh Soin, Anna Per­ach, Deb­o­rah Elen­ter, and Court­ney Con­rad. The col­lec­tion has been host­ed by the Uni­ver­si­ty of Sal­ford (2013–2017), King’s Col­lege Lon­don (2017–2021) and the Uni­ver­si­ty of Kent (2022–2026), with exhi­bi­tion part­ner­ships at the Whit­worth Art Gallery, IKON and Leeds City Art Gallery. Since 2019, the col­lec­tion has run an annu­al Sum­mer School for artists, mid­wives and researchers. birthritescollection.org.uk

ALSO

Can’t make Fri­day 27th? Deb­o­rah will also be at The Pho­to­book Cafe on Mon­day 30 March, 6–7.30pm for a relaxed, infor­mal book sign­ing. Free — book sep­a­rate­ly via Eventbrite.

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21.–22.11.2025 | AGEM-Tagung 2025 | Zukunftswerkstatt: Die nächsten zehn Jahre Anthropos-Institut, St. Augustin

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