1. The campaigns were conducted by the International Health Commission, a constituent agency of the RF, later renamed the International Health Board and finally the International Health Division. Here RF is used for convenience. For a history of the division, see J. Farley (2004), To Cast Out Disease: A History of the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation (1913–1951) (New York: Oxford University Press).
2. D. Arnold (1994), “Colonial Medicine in Transition: Medical Research in India, 1910–14,” South Asia Research, 14: 10–35.
3. S. Bhattacharya, M. Harrison, and M. Worboys (2005), Fractured States: Smallpox, Public Health and Vaccination Policy in British India 1800–1947 (New Delhi: Orient Longman)
4. Khalid A. (2009), “’subordinate’ Negotiations: Indigneous Staff, the Colonial State and Public Health,” in The Social History of Health and Medicine in Colonial India, ed. B. Pati and M. Harrison (Delhi: Primus Books), pp. 45–73.
5. Stein, E. (2012), “Hygiene and Decolonization: The Rockefeller Foundation and Indonesian Nationalism, 1933–1958,” in Science, Public Health and the State in Modern Asia, ed. Liping Bu, Darwin Stapleton and Ka-Che Yip (New York: Roudedge), pp. 51–70.