Health and Community in South Asia
The symposium will be held virtually.
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Call for Papers
We invite submissions of abstracts up to 200 words, on topics related but not limited to the following themes, with all submissions taking care to situate in the contexts of South Asia and its diasporas.
The symposium will be held virtually.
Please submit your abstracts via the form on our symposium website before January 31, 2022.
THEME 1
The Art of Communication
about health
Communicating messages about health to the public is both an art and a science. For this theme, we hope to attract both artists and communications specialists. Artists play a key role in communicating messages of well-being, critiquing sources of harm, and serving as visionaries for alternative futures. We invite submissions using any combination of graphics, literature,
performance, video, spoken word or song. In addition, we invite submissions from communications specialists from various social science fields of public health, social work,
communications, sociology and anthropology. The behind-the-scenes work of health messaging, as well as the roles of government actors on the public stage, are generative areas for analysis of health and community in South Asia.
THEME 2
The Politics of Care
during COVID-19
COVID-19 has deepened existing fissures in equity in health and healthcare as well as opened new lines of inquiry. With this theme, we address global and local vaccine inequities, oxygen and ICU shortages, the embodied experiences of doctors, nurses, and emergency responders, and the symbolic meanings of masks. We welcome investigations into how state actors, market forces, civil society, and the media shape the landscape of health and/or influence the politics of care. We also invite narratives of care for family, community, and even strangers on social media, exploring the ways people mobilize carework during crisis.
THEME 3
The Power of Data
in public health and politics
The COVID-19 pandemic has created public and professional demand for constant, up-to-date health data, as epidemiologists and lay people alike seek data dashboards and models of what to expect in the future. But data collection in the name of global health has a long history of being a sizeable industry in South Asia. What do the data tell us about health, and what do the gaps in data—or even the suppression of numbers—tell us about the politics of health? What are the latest innovations in metrics, models, technologies and governance that inspire, and the frustrations that data scientists encounter as they share with policy makers and publics? How might innovations toward data democratization alter the status quo of community/public health?
Keynote speakers and other events will be announced on the CSAS Spring Symposium 2022 website.
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CSAS Symposium subcommittee:
Dr. Anna Stirr, Dr. Jan Brunson, Dr. Ashok Das, and Irmak Yazici.
If you have any questions, contact us at:
csas@hawaii.edu