Publication: The criminalization of physicians and the delegitimization of violence in Turkey
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Advisor
Publication Date
2016
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
In June 2013, protests that erupted in Gezi Park in Istanbul, Turkey were met with state violence, mobilizing hundreds of native physicians to deliver emergency medical care. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in makeshift clinics during these protests, interviews with Gezi physicians and analyses of recent laws restricting emergency care provision, in this article I explore the criminalization of clinical practice through legal and coercive means of the government and the delegitimization of state violence through clinical and expert witnessing practices of physicians. As I show, material, legal, and discursive articulations of the idiom of medical neutrality revolve around the tension between medical praxis as neutrality and medical praxis as political participation. I offer a reconsideration of medical humanitarian and human rights regimes in terms of their consequences for inciting, documenting and restricting state violence.
Description
Source:
Medical Anthropology
Publisher:
Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd
Keywords:
Subject
Anthropology, Reproductive biology, Social sciences, Biomedical