Since the 1960s, a persistent shortage of health workers has led professionals managing Human Resources for Health (HRH) to frame their field as in “crisis.” Since the HIV/AIDS epidemic, this discourse has coincided with a general securitization of global health. I explore the extent to which crisis discourse in HRH potentially signifies securitization of HRH using a narrative review of 153 articles from the PubMed database and a case study of a global, USAID-funded HRH strengthening partnership (The Capacity Project). Findings show a marked discursive shift after a 2004 collaborative report by the “Joint Learning Initiative,” which led to increased and normalized crisis discourse focusing on the threat of systemic collapse. Programmatically, this shift enabled an emergency-oriented technical approach focusing on high-level solutions that increase efficiency and surveillance and establish a new type of emergency manager: the global HRH crisis expert. I argue that the discourse of crisis may be pushing HRH towards fast-track action scenarios common to securitization, potentially closing the door to community-oriented or upstream approaches. Anthropologists or other social scientists working with local communities should monitor these developments and become active participants in HRH steering groups or political-legal bodies to support upstream and alternative (non-biomedical) solutions, such as community health resources.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Fall 2018
Medical Anthropology|
September 01 2018
Crisis Discourse in Human Resources for Health: A Move Towards Securitization? Available to Purchase
Daniel H. de Vries
Daniel H. de Vries
Daniel de Vries is Assistant Professor in the Anthropology of Health at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Search for other works by this author on:
Human Organization (2018) 77 (3): 249–261.
Citation
Daniel H. de Vries; Crisis Discourse in Human Resources for Health: A Move Towards Securitization?. Human Organization 1 September 2018; 77 (3): 249–261. doi: https://doi.org/10.17730/0018-7259.77.3.249
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Could not validate captcha. Please try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionCiting articles via
MPAs AS PROTECTED DESTINATIONS: RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN OUTDOOR RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES, INCLUDING FISHING, AND PERCEPTIONS OF MARINE RESERVES IN PUGET SOUND, WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES
Marc L. Miller, Richard B. Pollnac, Patrick J. Christie
RESPONSIBLE DRIVING IN THE AGE OF SMARTPHONES: APPLIED RESEARCH FOR IMPROVING ROAD SAFETY IN THE MOTOR CITY
Yuson Jung, Andrea Sankar, Kaitlin Carter, Yen-Ting Chang, Bianca Dean, Travis Kruso, Colleen Linn, Emily Lock, Craig Meiners, Molly Sanford, Haley Scott, Jasmine Walker
EDITORIAL: KEEPING PACE
Lenore Manderson