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
Memeing the Great Reset: Circulating post-COVID conspiracies in the UK Freedom Movement
Workshop
E‑seminar in the frameworks of the 75th Media Anthropology Network
75th Media Anthropology Network: „Memeing the Great Reset: Circulating post-COVID conspiracies in the UK Freedom Movement”
Monday, 30 March to Sunday, 12 April 2026
E‑seminar
Further details can be found here:
We’ll be discussing a working paper from Dr Campbell Thomson.> (King’s College London) titled „Memeing the Great Reset: Circulating post-COVID conspiracies in the UK Freedom Movement”
The working paper is now available for download
On Monday, 30 March, I will open the seminar by introducing our appointed discussant(s) and inviting them to commence the discussion by sharing their comments on the paper with the list. Following this, I will open the floor to all list members for further discussion.
We are excited to celebrate the 75th edition of the MediaNet E‑seminar series with Campbell’s excellent paper, and we hope you will join the conversation! Please feel free to share this event with colleagues and students who might be interested, and encourage them to participate.
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
Deserving Bodies, Contested Injuries: Moral Economies of Worker Health
Panel
CFP for Oral Presentation Session at the American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting
Cfp for Panel „Deserving Bodies, Contested Injuries: Moral Economies of Worker Health”
Organizers: Zeynel Gül (University of Illinois, Chicago) and Gabriela Morales (Scripps College)
Discussant: Alex Nading (Cornell University)
Nov 18–22, 2026
St. Louis, MO
Dealdine April 15, 2026
This panel centers the moral economies that emerge around sickness, injury, and toxicexposure stemming from work and the workplace. We seek papers that unpack how workers,medical providers, legal experts, occupational safety experts, and employers evaluate bodilyharm—and its prevention and compensation—in the workplace. What kinds of work and whatkinds of harm do these actors render visible or invisible? Given that occupational health is ahighly state-centered concept, what notions of fairness, value, and acceptable risk do peoplewith occupational injuries mobilize within and beyond regulatory discourses?Occupational health offers a unique vantage point for observing how the „worthiness” of lives isdifferentially distributed. Further, the slow violence of chronic disease and disability due to workextends biopolitics beyond the simple binaries of living or dying (Livingston 2005; Puar 2017). Yet, like other biomedical fields (Street 2014), occupational health is also less stable and unifiedthan it might first appear; it requires continual coordination and stabilization of what constituteswork, the workplace, and workplace harm. The multiplicity of actors involved in suchcoordination puts pressure on perspectives that view the moral economy as a monolithicconcept emerging solely as a response to aggressive market economies (see also Fassin 2015on this point). We ask: what intermediary components—such as health systems, families,courts, and bureaucracies—are engaged in the production and circulation of morals and valuesaround the injured worker’s body? How do the dynamic interactions between these componentsgenerate new categories, identities, and values while simultaneously dispersing the knowledgeand visibility of harm? Even further, for workers and providers alike, institutional assessmentsand compensation for harm can be unsatisfactory—and lead to alternative ways of relating toinjury and exposure. How, we ask, might we also reimagine what constitutes health in relation towork (or work in relation to health), within and beyond capitalist systems?
Please send a title and an abstract for your paper (of no more than 300 words) togmorales@scrippscollege.edu and zgul2@uic.edu by April 15, 2026














