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
For a Better Public Health and Healthcare: Multidisciplinary Solutions
Konferenz
International Conference, Montecatini Terme (Italy)
International Conference „For a Better Public Health and Healthcare: Multidisciplinary Solutions”
Montecatini Terme (Italy)
13–15 March 2026
Good Health and Well-being is one of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals, closely interconnected with social challenges, such as poverty and inequality. Avoidable poor health and inequalities in health and access to healthcare persist across all countries, while healthcare costs continue to rise. This conference aims to stimulate multidisciplinary thinking and action to develop solutions that grasp the opportunities offered by technological innovation, while tackling the socio-economic determinants of health and the effects of environmental challenges.
Sustainable healthcare solutions and effective public health delivery require more than just stated commitments — they demand concrete action, innovative thinking and sustained collaboration across sectors to enable a good patient experience and ensure efficient and sustainable health services. This International Multidisciplinary Conference will bring together actors in the interconnected fields of public health, health care and environment to investigate the state of health policies and services across different fields.
A key objective is to develop synergies between academic research, the management of the physical environment, public health delivery, health providers, public and private investors and policy makers. The aim is to stimulate an integrated approach to address both immediate challenges and long-term sustainability goals, improving efficiency, resilience and service accessibility to all community members, while promoting a greater focus on reducing demand upstream through appropriate preventive approaches in the physical, economic and psychosocial environment.
The Conference will develop through workshops and plenary sessions focused on three core areas and the complementary ways in which they impact the efficiency and resilience of public health policies and healthcare systems, and people’s health and wellbeing in a holistic sense.
The three interconnected core areas are:
(1) Tackling Systemic Healthcare Costs and Healthcare Access;
(2) Public Health and the Physical and Socio-economic Environment;
(3) Digital Health Innovation and Responsible AI in Health Systems.
Further Details and Updates are available at: International Multidisciplinary Health Conference 2026 | international urban symposium – ius
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.
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














