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
- Herausgabe der Zeitschrift Curare
- Durchführung von Tagungen
- Dokumentation von Literatur und Informationen
Curare
Zeitschrift für Medizinethnologie
aktuelle Ausgabe | Archiv aller Ausgaben | Call for Papers
Veranstaltungen
The Lancet’s Cases in Global Social Medicine
Vortrag
An initiative exploring how social forces shape health, illness, and care across diverse global contexts. Hybrid.
„The Lancet’s Cases in Global Social Medicine: a new initiative exploring how social forces shape health, illness, and care across diverse global contexts”
Each case integrates medical insight with anthropology and social science theory to provide critical, actionable tools for clinicians, public health practitioners, and policymakers.
This series will be launched across three leading institutions:
UC Berkeley (Berkeley Center for Social Medicine) – 13 April 2026
April 13 in Berkeley: The Lancet Global Social Medicine Series Kick-Off with Sir Michael Marmot
University of Chicago (Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society) – 16 April 2026
April 15 in Chicago: The Lancet Global Social Medicine Series Kick-Off with Sir Michael Marmot
University of Barcelona (Hub for Global Social Medicine) – 5 May 2026
May 5 in Barcelona: The Lancet Global Social Medicine Series Kick-Off with Fernando Simón
All events will be accessible in person and via livestream or recordings, enabling global participation. The series convenes an interdisciplinary group of clinicians, scholars, and practitioners.
The Cases in Global Social Medicine series presents real clinical cases from around the world, each illustrating how social determinants, such as inequality, migration, structural violence, and access to care, directly shape clinical outcomes.
Keynotes
The events will feature keynote addresses by Sir Michael Marmot (Berkeley and Chicago) and Fernando Simón (Barcelona), both of whom are global leading figures in the study of social determinants of health, highlighting how social conditions fundamentally shape health outcomes and why addressing them is essential to clinical care and policy. These events are designed for scholars and practitioners in medicine, public health, and the social sciences, as well as anyone interested in advancing health equity through interdisciplinary collaboration.
Discussions will include some of the five already published cases:
Case 1
Title: Medical compartmentalisation: a patient with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome in Japan(link is external)
Authors: Kiyoto Kasai; Yousuke Kumakura; Junko Kitanaka; Shin-ichiro Kumagaya; Scott D. Stonington
Case 2
Title: Structural intercompetency: an asylum seeker with abdominal pain in Tijuana, Mexico(link is external)
Authors: Carlos Martinez; Shamsher Samra; Todd Schneberk; Hannah Janeway
Case 3
Title: Linguistic pragmatism: a woman with progressive abdominal pain in Thailand(link is external)
Authors: Scott Stonington; Preeyanoot Surinkaew; Thidathit Prachanukool
Case 4
Title: Improvisation in contexts of infrastructural violence: a physician practising medicine in Sahrawi refugee camps(link is external)
Authors: Salek Ali Mohamed Elabd; Laroussi Mohamed Salem; Theodore L Michaels; Dahaman Bachir Hamadi; Raabub Mohamed-Lamin Mehdi; María Carrión; Seth M Holmes
Case 5
Title: Medico-legal entanglement: a woman with abdominal pain in Peru(link is external)
Authors: Michele Heisler; Marvel Celeste Sabino Pretel; Zoe Boudart; Lutz Oette
We warmly encourage you to join us, either in person or online, for this important global conversation
Long Covid and Society
Workshop
One-day symposium on „Long Covid and Society” (in-person and virtually)
One-day symposium on „Long Covid and Society” (in-person and virtually)
April 20, 2026
Columbia University

The conversation features sociologists, historians, anthropologists, science and technology studies scholars, patient advocates, clinicians, and scientists working around issues related to Long Covid’s impact on social inequalities. We will also feature researchers from Brazil and France to provide global perspectives on Long Covid.
Speakers for the day include Larry Au, JD Davids, Abigail Dumes, Gil Eyal, Emily Lim Rogers, Emily Mendenhall, David Scales, Melina Sherman, Pierre Robicquet, Andre Luiz Sica de Campos, Renan Gonçalves Leonel da Silva, Ilana Löwy, Julia Moore Vogel, and more.
Learn more and register: https://longcov.id/society
Democratic Horizons: Hype, Speculation, and the Space for Critique in Biomedical Futures
Panel
Invitation for a panel at 2026 4S Conference, Toronto, Canada
Invitation for open panel “Democratic Horizons: Hype, Speculation, and the Space for Critique in Biomedical Futures.”
2026 4S Conference
Toronto, Canada
October 7–10, 2026
Submission due date: April 30, 2026. More information at: https://www.4sonline.org/accepted_open_panels_toronto.php
We welcome contributions that address the governance and political economy of biomedicine and the life sciences, including emerging biotechnologies and ELSI research. Bringing together perspectives on power, temporality, and the politics of knowledge production, the panel seeks to explore how more inclusive and reflexive democratic horizons might be imagined and enacted.
Convenors: Alberto Aparicio, University of Texas Medical Branch; Andrew Murray, University of Pennsylvania
Keywords: Genetics, Genomics, Biotechnology; Economics, Markets, Value/Valuation; Medicine and Healthcare
The panel description is as follows:
What values will guide the future of biomedicine? STS scholarship shows that future expectations are performative, reorganizing the present by constructing visions of where science and society are headed. Today, these performative constructions are profoundly shaped by pervasive financial logics in biomedicine. Twenty-first century technological optimism is difficult to disentangle from hype and speculative valuation that frame innovation as morally urgent, even salvationary. This optimism shapes diverse emerging areas of biomedical technology: precision medicine, cell and gene therapies, genome editing, assisted reproduction, and AI-enabled diagnosis and drug discovery. Advocates for these technologies promise to solve social and political problems and cast uncertainty and contestation as temporary obstacles on the path to progress.
This panel attempts to ground biomedical hype in the everyday work of future-making. It asks, how are biomedical and health futures being produced and imagined, by whom, through what material-discursive infrastructures, and with what consequences? What tools does STS offer for analyzing—and potentially reshaping—cycles of hype, solutionism, and closure? We invite papers that attend to how biomedical futures become credible and investable: funding practices; forecasting and benchmarking; demonstrations and prototypes; policy roadmaps; clinical and regulatory work; moonshot initiatives; and data-driven research infrastructures. We also invite contributions that theorize how broad values like “democratization” and “inclusion” are defined, claimed, and contested in future-oriented biomedical projects. We are especially interested in methodological and theoretical insights into working against the grain of totalizing technologically determinist futures, examining how alternative values are articulated, translated into governance, or displaced by entrepreneurial and financial rationales. Finally, we welcome contributions willing to stake empirically informed normative claims to more just biomedical futures. Across cases, the panel will interrogate biomedical futures as instruments of authority in the present and ask what it would mean to foreground values beyond market growth in technoscientific futures.














