Affiliation:
1. Department of International Development King’s College London London UK
2. Institute of Social Medicine and Epidemiology Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane Neuruppin Germany
3. School of Global Studies University of Sussex Brighton UK
4. Centre of Social Medicine and Community Health Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi India
Abstract
AbstractWhile the growth of global markets in health‐related services may have significant consequences for healthcare provisioning and training, it has received relatively little attention from the social sciences. This article examines UK–India, and specifically England–India, exports in health worker education and training as one such global market, drawing on sociological scholarship on moral economies to understand how trading in this field is constructed and legitimated by the individuals and organisations involved, what tensions evolve, and what is at stake in them. We employ a qualitative mixed methods approach using publicly available materials on existing UK–India collaborations and primary data from interviews with key stakeholders in India and the UK, including government departments, arms‐length bodies, NHS Trusts, trade associations and private providers. Our analysis illustrates the key discursive strategies used to legitimate engagement in these markets, and the complex and contested moral economies unfolding between and across these stakeholders and contexts. Not least, we demonstrate the conflicting moral sentiments and the boundary work required to realise commodification. Situating cross‐border trade in health worker education and training in a moral economy framework thus illuminates the social context and moral worlds in which this evolving trade is embedded.
Funder
Economic and Social Research Council
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Health (social science)
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