Confronting colonial legacies and neoliberal hegemony in global health and development : creative Cuban social medicine adaptions from Venezuela to Timor-Leste

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dc.contributor.advisor Kirk, John M., 1951-
dc.coverage.spatial Cuba
dc.coverage.spatial Timor-Leste
dc.coverage.spatial Venezuela
dc.creator Walker, Christopher Alan Robert
dc.date.accessioned 2024-12-10T16:21:51Z
dc.date.available 2024-12-10T16:21:51Z
dc.date.issued 2024-11-01
dc.identifier.uri https://library2.smu.ca/xmlui/handle/01/32064
dc.description 1 online resource (392 pages) : colour illustrations, colour maps, charts, graphs
dc.description Includes abstract.
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (pages 362-392).
dc.description.abstract Despite recent and significant declines in health outcomes and health services in Cuba as well as a retreat of Cuba's medical internationalist program, this dissertation argues that there is a potential wealth of lessons to be learned from Cuba's successes and challenges in both Timor-Leste and Venezuela, particularly throughout the 2003-2020 era. Cuba provides particularly important considerations, especially in its assistance to developing Venezuela’s <i>Misión Barrio Adentro</i> (<i>MBA</i>) primary public health programme, that could help overcome fragmented Global North healthcare systems which struggle with the hospitalization of primary care to reimagine a truly patient-centred, team-based, proactive/preventive primary care and education system. Cuban efforts in Timor-Leste also have significant potential internationally in development efforts which could capacitate, through their creative medical education programmes, those in the Global South to meet their own health needs in an effort to buttress against future pandemics and global health challenges. In both examples, Cuba accomplished these feats with comparatively far less material and financial resources than Global North development efforts. However, Cuba's subaltern healthcare example has often been dismissed by many, either explicitly as part of a larger neoliberal geo-political project, or unconsciously, assumed by many to be too poor or undeveloped a country to learn from. As such, with the help of a political economy framework, this dissertation will evidence how health outcomes cannot be separated from power and inequality, nor can subaltern / oppressed voices reach those who would benefit from their knowledge in the current8 neoliberal hegemony. en_CA
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dc.description.provenance Made available in DSpace on 2024-12-10T16:21:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Walker_Christopher_PHD_2024.pdf: 3145374 bytes, checksum: 80e657ffb68c9d56a29acbd3b57e3b17 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2024-11-25 en
dc.language.iso en en_CA
dc.publisher Halifax, N.S. : Saint Mary's University
dc.subject.lcsh Medical assistance, Cuban -- Venezuela
dc.subject.lcsh Medical assistance, Cuban -- Timor-Leste
dc.subject.lcsh Postcolonialism -- Social aspects -- Venezuela
dc.subject.lcsh Postcolonialism -- Social aspects -- Timor-Leste
dc.subject.lcsh Developing countries -- Social conditions
dc.subject.lcsh Social medicine -- Cuba
dc.subject.lcsh Misión Barrio Adentro (Venezuela)
dc.subject.lcsh World health
dc.subject.lcsh Neoliberalism
dc.title Confronting colonial legacies and neoliberal hegemony in global health and development : creative Cuban social medicine adaptions from Venezuela to Timor-Leste en_CA
dc.type Text en_CA
thesis.degree.name Doctor of Philosophy in Global Development Studies
thesis.degree.level Doctoral
thesis.degree.discipline Global Development Studies Program
thesis.degree.grantor Saint Mary's University (Halifax, N.S.)
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