Article ID: CBB261986275

Locating the Health Hazard, Surveilling the Gecekondu: The Tuberculosis-Control Pilot Area of Zeytinburnu, Istanbul (1961–1963) (2023)

unapi

The stigmatisation of the gecekondu in post-1945 Turkey is a common theme in the literature. However, thesestudies have drawn little connection with health issues, even though these are known to be important in the mechanisms of stigmatisation. Policies for tuberculosis (TB) control—then Turkey's “number one health issue”—have tended to focus on individual and biological factors, to the detriment of social or environmental ones that could contribute to making TB a matter of politics and not only of policies. A close study of the practices of the numerous TB-control actors nevertheless reveals an entanglement of the social, the environmental, and the medical questions. Through the emblematic but unknown case study of the TB-control pilot area created in Zeytinburnu in 1961, this article studies discourses, but also graphic representations, portraying the gecekondu as unhealthy, revealing an underlying environmental conception of TB among Turkish public health actors. The choice of Istanbul's biggest gecekondu neighbourhood to be a pilot area originated from a common conception of the gecekondu areas as pathogenic, but also contributed to reinforcing this vision and adding it to the very definition of the gecekondu. It thus participated in the stigmatisation of these areas and their inhabitants, even if some of the study's conclusions undermined the common vision of the gecekondu as populated by poor, rural migrants. However, the pilot project was also conceived as a way to integrate the inhabitants into the modern city. The “pilot” character of the area, if characteristic of the vocabulary of the 1960s, which were also the time of the attempt to “socialise the health services” in Turkey, is questionable. The project displayed a desire to know and control this specific territory rather than a genuine promotion of broader environmental changes to be replicated on a national scale.

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Authors & Contributors
Armus, Diego C.
Bakker, Nelleke
Bhattacharya, Sanjoy
Brown, James Robert
Bynum, Helen
Clarke, Christopher E.
Journals
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History/Bulletin Canadienne d'Histoire de la Medecine
Central European History
Health and History
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
History of Education
Publishers
Duke University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Oxford University Press
University of Chicago Press
University Press of Kansas
Concepts
Public health
Prevention and control of disease
Tuberculosis
Disease and diseases
Infectious diseases
Medicine
Time Periods
20th century, late
20th century, early
20th century
21st century
19th century
Places
United States
India
Germany
Great Britain
Korea
Mexico
Institutions
World Health Organization (WHO)
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