Article ID: CBB792652142

A Cautionary Tale of Environmental Management: Malaria, Water Management, and Land Reclamation in Twentieth-Century Guatemala (July 2021)

unapi

In the late 1920s, Guatemala embarked on environmental drainage projects aimed at eradicating mosquito breeding grounds. Designed to improve people’s lives, these efforts sometimes inadvertently undermined them, draining away water crucial to public hygiene campaigns. Although the goals of controlling malaria and expanding arable land were often in lockstep, the Guatemalan case of Lake Quinizilapa requires a more nuanced analysis. Bringing the historiographies of the environment and public health and medicine to bear on environmental management projects, this article demonstrates that environmental management and scientific medicine were as much about leveraging disease as eradicating it. Whereas Hispanic authorities could maintain theories disproven by entomology and parasitology without much criticism, indígenas (indigenous people) who articulated notions that contradicted science and challenged engineering’s supremacy were disparaged as ignorant inditos (little Indians). Intriguingly, the indigenous conception of the natural world more accurately predicted the outcome of the lake’s drainage prior to World War II. Political power and ethnicity determined the legitimacy of perspectives about the environment and disease.

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Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB792652142/

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Authors & Contributors
Webb, James L. A., Jr.
de la Torre, Oscar
Bonan, Giacomo
Man-Kong, Wong
Bickers, Margaret A.
Leung, Yuen-Sang
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Journal of Global History
Journal of Economic History
Journal of Contemporary History
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Routledge India
The University of North Carolina Press
Viella
University Press of Colorado
Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai
Concepts
Public health
Malaria
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
Disease and diseases
Colonialism
Environment
People
Ross, Ronald
Laveran, Alphonse
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
21st century
18th century
Places
Guatemala
United States
Africa
Petén (Department)
South Asia
Republic of Liberia
Institutions
World Health Organization (WHO)
United Nations
Tennessee Valley Authority
Rockefeller Foundation
Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Md.)
Johns Hopkins Hospital
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