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Fall 2024 Class Schedule

Global Health Studies courses often reach their maximum capacity and subsequently close during registration. When this happens, students are advised to put themselves on a waitlist. If a student withdraws from a class, seats are filled from the waitlist. When necessary, graduating GHS seniors will be prioritized.

Students can add themselves to a waitlist in CAESAR by checking the “add me to the waitlist if this class is full” option when they put the course in their shopping cart.

Note that being on the waitlist does not guarantee admission into the class. Students will be contacted via email if spots become available. Students should not email GHS faculty or staff about gaining admission into a course. We are rarely able to add additional seats to a course, both because of space constraints in classrooms and to keep each faculty member's teaching capacity manageable. 

NOTE: The class GBL_HLTH 390 (Re)Mixing Qualitative Methods is, as of Fall 2024, GBL_HLTH 303. This is the same course, and it now counts toward the methods requirement for the adjunct major.

fall 2024 class Schedule

Core Courses
Course Title Instructor Day/Time
GBL_HLTH 201 Introduction to Global Health Sullivan TTH 11am-12:20pm
GBL_HLTH 222 Social Determinants of Health Locke TTH 2:00pm-3:20pm
GBL_HLTH 302 Global Bioethics Reyes MW 12:30pm-1:50pm
GBL_HLTH 303 (Re)mixing Qualitative Methods Mitchell TTH 9:30am-10:50am
GBL_HLTH 310 Supervised Global Health Research: Maternal Health in the 20th Century Rodriguez TTH 12:30pm-1:50pm
GBL_HLTH 317 Native American Health Research & Prevention Reyes TH 2:00pm-4:50pm
GBL_HLTH 337 (ENVR_POL 337) Hazards, Disasters, and Society Hoominfar TTH 9:30am-10:50am
GBL_HLTH 338 (ENVR_POL 338) Environmental Justice Hoominfar TTH 2:00om-3:20pm
GBL_HLTH 339 (ENVR_POL 339) Silent but Loud: Negotiating Health in a Cultural, Food, Poverty, and Environmental Caste Mitchell TTH 11:00am-12:30pm
GBL_HLTH 340 Mental Health and the Arts Locke W 2:00pm-4:50pm
GBL_HLTH 390-0-21 (PUB_HLTH 390-0-20) Special Topics in Global Health: International Public Health Leonard M 6:15pm-9:00pm
GBL_HLTH 390-0-28 Global Circulations and Human Health: Migrations and Trafficks of Human Beings, Human Parts, and Human Products Au MWF 10:00am-10:50am
GBL_HLTH 390-0-29 Infectious Disease Eradication Au MWF 11am-11:50am

 

Elective Courses
Course Title Instructor Day/Time
ANTHRO 309 Human Osteology Erin Waxenbaum F 10:00am-12:00pm
ANTHRO 382 (ENVR_POL 384) Political Ecology Melissa Rosenzewig MW 11:00am-12:20pm
BIOL_SCI 310 Human Physiology Tracy Hodgson MW 2:00pm-3:20pm
BIOL_SCI 355 Immunobiology Hilary Truchan MWF 10:00am-10:50am
BIOL_SCI 377 The Human Microbiome Hilary Truchan MW 12:30pm-1:50pm
BIOL_SCI 380 The Biology of Cancer Xiaomin Bao TTH 2:00pm-3:20pm
BUS_INST 394-LK Professional Linkage Seminar: Lessons in Non-Profit Management Mary Graettinger,
Paul Sznewajs
TH 2:00pm-4:50pm
CFS 391 Field Studies in Social Justice Jessica Ibrahim Puri TH 4:30pm-6:30pm
CFS 392 Field Studies in Public Health Jessica Ibrahim Puri M 6:30pm-8:30pm
CFS 397 Field Studies in Civic Engagement Sarah Silins W 6:30pm-8:30pm
COMM_ST 395-0-23 Social History of Psychedelic Medicines Bruce L. Lambert MW 1:30pm-2:50pm
COMM_ST 395-0-25 Social Media, Technology, & Mental Health Sarah Syversen TTH 1:00pm-2:20pm
ECON 307 (Lecture) Economics of Medical Care Frank Limbrock TTH 12:30pm-1:50pm
ECON 307 (Discussion) Economics of Medical Care Frank Limbrock F 1:00pm-1:50pm
BMD_ENG 325 Introduction to Medical Imaging Alan Varteres Sahakian MWF 1:00pm-1:50pm
BMD_ENG 390 Biomedical Engineering Design Matthew Glucksberg, David P O'Neill, Chamille Joanne Lescott, Kiki Zissimopoulos​ MWF 3:00pm-4:50pm
CHEM_ENG 373 Biotechnology and Global Health Keith Tyo MWF 3:00pm-3:50pm
CIV_ENG 361 Environmental Microbiology Luisa Marcelino MW 2:00pm-3:50pm
IEMS 385 Introduction to Health Systems Management Sanjay Mehrohtra MW 3:30pm-4:50pm
ENGLISH 381 Literature & Medicine Michelle Huang MW 2:00pm-3:20pm
GNDR_ST 331 Sociology of Gender and Sexuality Rebecca Ewert MW 3:30pm-4:50pm
GNDR_ST 341-0-20 Transnational Perspectives on Gender and Sexuality SB West TTH 12:30pm-1:50pm
GNDR_ST 341-0-21 Transnational Perspectives on Gender and Sexuality Jillana Enteen TTH 12:30pm-1:50pm
HUM 220 (SOCIOL 220, Lecture) Health, Biomedicine, Culture, and Society Santiago José Molina TTH 11:00am-12:20pm
HUM 220 (SOCIOL 220, Discussion) Health, Biomedicine, Culture, and Society Santiago José Molina​ T 1:00pm-1:50pm
PSYCH 303 Psychopathology Renee Engeln MW 11:00am-12:20pm
PSYCH 341 Positive Psychology: the Science of Well-Being Wendi Gardner W 2:00pm-4:50pm
RELIGION 345 Idea of Sainthood in Christianity: Sainthood & the Body Lily Clara Stewart MW 2:00pm-3:20pm
SOC_POL 333 Economics of Health, Human Capital, and Happiness Hannes Schwandt MW 2:00pm-3:20pm

 

fall 2024 course descriptions

Core Courses

GBL_HLTH 201: Introduction to Global Health 

This course introduces students to pressing disease and health care problems worldwide and examines efforts currently underway to address them. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, the course identifies the main actors, institutions, practices and forms of knowledge production characteristic of what we call “global health” today, and explores the environmental, social, political and economic factors that shape patterns and experiences of illness and healthcare across societies. We will scrutinize the value systems underpinning specific paradigms in the policy and science of global health practice, and place present-day developments in historical perspective. As an introductory course on global health, the class delves into comparative health systems, including comparative health systems in high- and low-income countries. Key topics will include: policies and approaches to global health, key actors in global health, comparative health systems, structural violence, gender and reproductive health, chronic and communicable diseases, politics of global health research and evidence, and the ethics of global health equity.

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 222: The Social Determinants of Health

The human body is embedded into a health framework that can produce hypervisibility, invisibility, or both. This course in social science and medical anthropology examines the role of social markers of difference, including race, class, gender, sexuality, age, and religion, in current debates and challenges in the theory and practice of global health. We will explore recent illness experiences, therapeutic and self-care interventions, and health practices and behaviors in socio-cultural and historical context through case studies in the U.S., Brazil, and South Africa. The purpose of this course is to introduce students to key concepts such as embodiment, medicalization, structural violence, social determinants of health, biopolitics, health equity, and an ethic of care. Central questions of the course include: How do categories of "Othering" determine disease and health in individuals and collectives? How is medical science and care influenced by economic and political institutions and by patient trust? How do social and economic inclusion/exclusion control access to health treatment and self-care and care of others? This course focuses on the linkages between society and health inequalities in the U.S. and economic powers. It offers a forum to explore policy application with a particular emphasis on definitions that form social factors. This course utilizes historical accounts, contemporary ethnographies, Twitter threads of health experiences, public health literature, media reports, TedTalks, and films to bring to life the "why's" of health differences.

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 302: Global Bioethics

Global health is a popular field of work and study for Americans, with an increasing number of medical trainees and practitioners, as well as people without medical training, going abroad to volunteer in areas where there are few health care practitioners or resources. In addition, college undergraduates, as well as medical trainees and practitioners, are going abroad in increasing numbers to conduct research in areas with few healthcare resources. But all of these endeavors, though often entered into with the best of intentions, are beset with ethical questions, concerns, and dilemmas, and can have unintended consequences. In this course, students will explore and consider these ethical challenges. In so doing, students will examine core global bioethical concerns - such as structural violence - and core global bioethical codes, guidelines, and principals - such as beneficence and solidarity - so they will be able to ethically assess global health practices in a way that places an emphasis on the central goal of global health: reducing health inequities. With an emphasis on the ethical responsibility to reduce inequities, we consider some of the most pressing global bioethical issues of our time: equity, fairness, and planetary health. Particular attention is given to the ethics of research during a pandemic and equitable access to vaccines and therapies for Covid-19. Beatriz will not be use ungrading for this course but each student will create an assignment bundle.

Fulfills Area V (Ethics and Values) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 303: (Re)Mixing Qualitative Methods

In this upper-level course exploring approaches to meld traditional data collection methods with alternative techniques, students will review decolonizing ways that Black/African American individuals have used to reveal their truths and construct and reconstruct images of themselves. Students will explore how these same processes can be applied in public health data collection to be inclusive and validate the methods and ways of knowing that have assisted underserved, underheard, and underrepresented communities in advocating for justice to survive. Course readings will consist of text that provides a critical lens to view qualitative data collection methods through and will include studies in historical and traumatic violence that underscore how people living in Black bodies work to survive by Joy DeGruy and the negotiating processes that Black individuals use to exercise agency and evaluate systemic oppressions that impede how they navigate life as articulated by authors such as Patricia Hill Collins, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Richard Delgado, and Jean Stefancic.

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 309: Biomedicine and World History

This lecture course uses the Covid-19 pandemic as a point of departure to study the history of global health and biomedicine. We will break the quarter into four segments during which we will consider: 1) the "unification of the globe" by infectious diseases; 2) the role of empires, industries, war, and revolutions in spreading biomedical cultures around the world; 3) the functions played by transnational and global health institutions in different continents; and 4) the growth of the pharmaceutical industry and the narcotics trade. Students will have a chance to apply insights from the readings - about histories of racial segregation, reproductive politics, militarization, and police powers - to the more recent past. Lectures and readings cover all world regions: Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, North America, Asia, Europe, and the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement
Fulfills Area IV (Historical Studies) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 310-1: Supervised Global Health Research: Maternal Health in the 20th Century

Maternal health, in particular, maternal mortality, is a significant concern in global health, and in this class we will consider the historical roots of two areas of focus on improving maternal health and reducing maternal mortality: women having access to skilled birth attendants and birth control options. We will look at this broad international concern by focusing on the work of one organization in the 1960s-1970s, the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM), by examining their papers, held at the Wellcome Library and Archives in London. We will visit the library the week before classes start and this research will form the basis of the seminar course during the quarter. This class will culminate in a major paper using the primary sources from the ICM research done in London.

Course available to accepted applicants only.

GBL_HLTH 317: Native American Health Research and Prevention

Native nations in what is currently the United States are continuously seeking to understanding and undertake the best approaches to research and prevention with their communities. This course introduces students to the benefits and barriers to various approaches to addressing negative health outcomes and harnessing positive social determinants of health influencing broader health status. Important concepts to guide our understanding of these issues will include settler colonialism, colonialism, sovereignty, social determinants of health, asset-based perspectives, and decolonizing research. Students will engage in a reading-intensive, discussion-based seminar, drawing upon research and scholarship from a variety of disciplines including public health, Native American and Indigenous Studies, sociology, history, and medicine. This course does not focus on nor teach traditional Native medicine or philosophies as those are not appropriate in this predominately non-Native environment.  

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 325: History of Reproductive Health

The history of reproduction is a large subject, and during this course we will touch on many, but by no means all, of what can be considered as part of this history. Our focus will be on human reproduction, considering the vantage points of both healthcare practitioners and lay women and men. We will look at ideas concerning fertility, conception, pregnancy, miscarriage, childbirth, birth control, abortion, and assisted reproduction. Because, at a fundamental level, reproduction is about power - as historian Amy Kaler (but by no means only Kaler), pointed out, "[c]control over human reproduction is eternally contested, in zones ranging from the comparative privacy of the conjugal bedroom to the political platform and programs of national polities" - we will pay attention to power in reproductive health. And, since the distribution of power in matters of reproduction has often been uneven and unequal - between men and women, between colonizing and Indigenous populations, between clinicians and lay people, between those in upper socioeconomic classes and those in lower socioeconomic classes - we will pay particular attention during this class to struggles over matters of reproduction as we explore historical changes and continuities in reproduction globally since 1900.

Fulfills Area IV (Historical Studies) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 337 (ENVR_POL 337): Hazards, Disasters, and Society

This course examines how socioeconomic and environmental factors work together to cause hazards and disasters in human society. In this course we learn the main concepts about disaster such as preparedness, vulnerability, resilience, response, mitigation, etc. We learn that a disaster does not have the same effect on everyone (all groups of people), and factors of social inequality such as race, ethnicity, class, and gender, make people more vulnerable to impacts of disasters. Also, this course, with an interdisciplinary perspective, analyzes disasters in the global North and South. This is a discussion-intensive course for advanced undergrad students. The classes are the student-centered with an emphasis on collaborative learning. The class meetings will consist of lecture, discussion, presentations, teamwork, activities, video/audio materials and projects. 

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 338 (ENVR_POL 338): Environmental Justice

This course examines how environmental problems reflect and exacerbate social inequality. In this course, we learn the definition of environmental (in)justice; the history of environmental justice; and also examples of environmental justice will be discussed. We will learn about environmental movements. This course has a critical perspective on health disparities in national and international levels. How environmental injustice impacts certain groups more than others and the social and political economic reasons for these injustices will be discussed in this course. This is a discussion-intensive course for advanced undergrad students. The classes are student-centered with an emphasis on collaborative learning. The class meetings will consist of lectures, discussions, presentations, teamwork, activities, video/audio materials and projects.

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 339 (ENVR_POL 339): Silent but Loud: Negotiating Health in a Cultural, Food, Poverty, and Environmental Caste

To be "healthy" is a complex obstacle course that many individuals living in certain bodies have to navigate. Black bodies, for example, are often the tied to (un)health because they are stereotyped as in need to be controlled, managed, and "guided" into healthfulness. In the U.S., these narrow stereotypes are just a few of the ways Black bodies get defined. In this course, we will move beyond those restrictive stereotypes, guided by questions such as, "How does culture define health?", "How does the food pipeline affect the health of certain bodies?" and "What does it mean to live in an obesogenic environment?" In this course, we examine the connection between health, culture, food, and environment with a focus on what is silenced and what is loud when generating "fixes" for "diseased" bodies. Silence refers to the disregard and dismissiveness of the narratives and experiences around the oppressions attached to the health of certain bodies. Yet, this silence echoes as Loud when connected to their culture, food, and environment when discussing diseases highlighted in Black bodies such as obesity, hypertension, and diabetes.

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

 

GBL_HLTH 340: Mental Health and the Arts

This course draws on perspectives from anthropology, related social scientific fields, and the humanities to explore the role of the arts and media narratives in shaping politics and experiences of mental health and illness around the world. We will consider forms of storytelling—including literature, film, and theater—across eras and cultures, tracking shifts in perspectives on normality and pathology and their consequences for the most vulnerable. How does the power of Western psychiatry intersect with that of global media to reinforce reigning paradigms and imperatives for how suffering is to be understood, classified, and experienced? Conversely, what counter-narratives are being produced by artists and their communities? What role can the arts play in individual and collective forms of healing—or in exacerbating pain and grievance? What kinds of voices seem to have power, and which are neglected? Where is the line between cathartic and exploitative representation of trauma and mental illness? How, in short, do the stories we tell about mental illness “get under the skin” and shape forms of suffering and care?

Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 390-0-21 (PUB_HLTH 390-0-20): Special Topics in Global Health: International Public Health

This course introduces students to pressing disease and health care problems worldwide and examines efforts currently underway to address them. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, the course identifies the main actors, institutions, practices and forms of knowledge production characteristic of what we call "global health" today, and explores the environmental, social, political and economic factors that shape patterns and experiences of illness and healthcare across societies. We will scrutinize the value systems that underpin specific paradigms in the policy and science of global health and place present-day developments in historical perspective. Key topics will include: policies and approaches to global health governance and interventions, global economies and their impacts on public health, medical humanitarianism, global mental health, maternal and child health, pandemics (HIV/AIDS, Ebola, H1N1, Swine Flu), malaria, food insecurity, health and human rights, and global health ethics. 

GBL_HLTH 390-0-28: Special Topics in Global Health: Global Circulations and Human Health: Migrations and Trafficks of Human Beings, Human Parts, and Human Products

Human beings and human parts/products are on the move across the globe, shaped by inequities that drive poor health outcomes for many involved in these circulations. More human beings are being forced from their homes than ever before in history; more and more are being turned away as they seek resettlement. Global economic migration is poorly regulated and rife with exploitation. The flow of human organs for transplantation increasingly moves from the poor in the Global South to the rich in the Global North. Even the production of human babies through international surrogacy is driven by economic inequities. This course examines the role of advocacy, law, politics and ethics to preserve dignity and health as human beings and human parts increasingly circulate across global boundaries.

GBL_HLTH 390-0-29: Special Topics in Global Health: Infectious Disease Eradication

Despite many efforts across several diseases spanning decades and billions of dollars, global health actors have only been able to eradicate one infectious human disease: smallpox. Why? This course will attempt to answer this question by examining several failed and continuing disease eradication efforts through a multidisciplinary lens. Case studies will include smallpox, malaria, polio, measles, and hypothetical emerging infectious diseases. We will examine the grandiose global health goal of total disease eradication in relation to sociopolitical realities that limit the applications of idealized technological interventions.

 

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