1st Edition
Science, Public Health and the State in Modern Asia
1. Introduction - Liping Bu and Ka-che Yip 2. Science, Culture, and Disease Control in Colonial Hong Kong - Ka-che Yip 3. Public Health in Prewar Singapore: The Development of Hospital Services and Medical Education - Law Yuen Han 4. Hygiene and Decolonization: The Rockefeller Foundation and Indonesian Nationalism, 1933-1958 - Eric Andrew Stein 5. The Alma-Ata Declaration, Rockefeller Foundation and the Development of Primary Health Care in Sri Lanka: A Model for Health Promotion - Soma Hewa 6. "Removing the Obstacles to Public Health Work": Rockefeller Initiatives in Public Health in China and Japan and its Effects, 1925-1950 - Darwin Stapleton 7. From Race Biology to Population Control: The Rockefeller Foundation’s "Public Health" Projects in Japan, 1920s-1950s - Aiko Takeuchi-Demirci 8. Beijing First Health Station: Innovative Public Health Education and Influence on China’s Health Profession - Liping Bu 9. Between the State and the Private Sphere: The Chinese State Medicine Movement, 1930-1949 - Xi Gao 10. From Japanese Colonial Medicine to American-Standard Medicine in Taiwan – A Case Study of the Transition in the Medical Profession and Practices in East Asia - Michael Shiyung Liu 11. In Republican China, Public Health by Whom, for Whom? - Bridie Andrews 12. Conclusion
Biography
Liping Bu is Professor of History at Alma College, Michigan. Her publications include Making the World Like Us: Education, Cultural Expansion, and the American Century. Darwin H. Stapleton is Professor of History at University of Massachusetts-Boston, and Executive Director Emeritus of the Rockefeller Archive Center, USA. He is the editor of Creating a Tradition of Biomedical Research: Contributions to the History of The Rockefeller University. Ka-che Yip is Professor of History at the University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA. Recent publications include, as editor, Disease, Colonialism, and the State: Malaria in East Asian History.






