18/04/2023
18:00 21:00
En vue de l'Agora de la Décroissance du 25 mai, venez découvrir la décroissance le mardi 18 Avril, en bas des marches de Saint-Thomas, pour réfléchir ensemble à comment faire bouger Sciences Po sur les questions écologiques et sociales… Lire la suite

Venez découvrir la décroissance le mardi 18 Avril à 18h, sur les marches de Saint-Thomas, et réfléchir ensemble à comment faire bouger Sciences Po sur les questions écologiques et sociales. 

Cinq groupes de travail seront organises pour penser collectivement à cinq propositions décroissantes pour notre Ecole. Nous aurons l'occasion de discuter de lien social, maquette d'études, partenariats, alimentation et gaspillage et plein d'autres sujets encore. An English group for International students will be also set up. 

Pas necessaire de s'y connaitre sur le sujet, l'idée est de créer un moment convival d'échange entre étudiant.es avec pique nique participatif et bonne ambiance. Nous vous invitons également à apporter quelque chose à partager! 

Inscription non obligatoire mais recommandée : 

Organisé par : Pavés, Sciences Po Environnement (SPE), La Grenade, Alter Kapitae
Évènement en Français
19/04/2023
14:00 16:00
Présentation de Hannah-Louise Clark… Lire la suite

Hygienic Surveillance in early 20th-century Algeria

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the importance of collecting, presenting, analyzing, and acting on information about infectious diseases, as well as failures in this domain, have become hypervisible as part of global governance and public health. This paper seeks to encourage historians to consider (or reconsider) changing forms and meanings of bureaucratic writing about disease in the 20th century, using the example of Algeria under French colonial occupation: a key case for understanding the relationships that could exist among medicine, empire, and “race". It shows that records produced by Algerian officials from the early 20th century, such as disease outbreak notification forms in Arabic and narrative sanitary reports in French, can be read not only for the descriptive details which they contain—such how sanitary policing was carried out and individuals targeted by surveillance responded in different regional socioeconomic and environmental contexts. The records of hygienic surveillance can also be used to write the social history of the Algerian state and its officials, from uncovering traces of Ottoman administrative memory in the workings of French colonial bureaucracy to revealing how racialized religious categories and managerial processes formatted the delivery of public health.

Hannah-Louise CLARK

Invitée au Centre d'histoire du  1er au 30 avril 2023

Hannah-Louise Clark is Senior Lecturer in Global Economic and Social History at the University of Glasgow. Her research and publications centre on the global dynamics of health and social welfare; cross-cultural translations of knowledge and professional categories; technology transfer; and epidemics, with a geographical focus on North Africa in its Islamic, Ottoman, French colonial, and global contexts, ca. 1800 to the present. She is the lead author of a transdisciplinary teaching tool, Global History Hackathon Playbook (2019), and is currently finishing a book about how “race” and religious discrimination shaped the organization and delivery of bacteriological public health in early 20th-century Algeria. Clark is also Co-Investigator with Helen Tilley and Michael Oladejo Afoláyan on a National Endowment for the Humanities-funded project exploring connections among African medical, imperial, and art histories.
Contact : hannah-Louise.Clark@glasgow.ac.uk
Référent au CHSP : M'hamed Oualdi

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Organisé par : Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po
Évènement en Anglais