Issue 28 | June 2019

A Special Feature on Public Health.
Research
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“Immigration Policy is Health Policy” by Elyas Bakhtiari
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“What Can Political Science Learn from Public Health? Reflections on Epidemiology and Methodology” by Julia Lynch
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“Establishing a Global Socioeconomic Network and Data Warehouse to Monitor and Explain Health Inequalities” by Terje A. Eikemo, Tim Huijts, Mirza Balaj, Johan P.Mackenbach, and Emmanuela Gakidou
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“Engine and Brakes: European Welfare States and the Medicalization of Social Problems” by Nadine Reibling
Interviews
Visual Art
Poetry
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Six Poems by Ágnes Gergely, translated from the Hungarian by Ottilie Mulzet
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Five Poems by Maia Evrona
Nonfiction
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Entries from the Diaries of Lea Goldberg by Lea Goldberg, translated from the Hebrew by Tsipi Keller
Reviews
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Medicine in First World War Europe: Soldiers, Medics, Pacifists by Fiona Reid
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Talaat Pasha: Founder of Modern Turkey, Architect of Genocide reviewed by Mehmet Polatel
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History after Hitler: A Transatlantic Enterprise reviewed by Claudio Minca
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Organic Resistance: The Struggle Over Industrial Farming in Postwar France reviewed by Rachel Ankeny
Campus Spotlight: University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
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“Health for the People and for the Person: An Interview with Dr. Nortin Hadler” by Hélène B. Ducros
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“Heine-Medin Disease: A Historical and Eponymous Perspective” by Ugo Goetzl
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“Teaching as a Historian in Medical School” by Raúl Necochea López
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“Syllabus: History of Medicine from the Patient’s Point of View” by Raúl Necochea López
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“Syllabus: Taxes, Bans, & Burgers: Global Food Policy and Obesity Prevention” by Lindsey Smith Taillie
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“Syllabus: Health and Gender After Socialism” by Michele Rivkin-Fish
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“Syllabus: Living, Healing, and Dying in Russia” by Michele Rivkin-Fish and Jehanne Gheith
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“Syllabus: Anthropology and Public Health” by Michele Rivkin-Fish and Mark Sorensen
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“Syllabus: Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Global Health” by Mike Fisher
Campus
Editor’s Picks