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L’utilité de ce genre d’institutions est incontestable. Car le monde moderne est sans cesse confronté à des innovations, médicales ou autres, qui s’appliquent à l’homme ou à son environnement proche. Ce lieu est donc nécessaire pour préparer la matière intellectuelle qui sera ensuite transférée aux citoyens afin que ceux- ci puissent se prononcer quant à la légitimité de ces innovations.

 

Professeur Axel Kahn, le célèbre généticien français, lors de l’inauguration de la Fondation Brocher

 

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Le Cycle Brocher organise de nombreuses conférences au cours de l'année. La plupart des conférences sont disponibles en podcast

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Martha Lincoln Martha Lincoln

Associate Professor - San Francisco State University
United States

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I am a medical and cultural anthropologist. Broadly, my research addresses the cultural politics of public health, biopolitics, and the effects of political economic change on health systems and health outcomes.

Since 2008, I’ve conducted field research in Vietnam, with projects supported by the Social Science Research Council and IIE Fulbright. I’ve published research on Hanoi’s informal sector, stratification and deregulation in health care provision, the ghosts of war, alcohol use and drinking cultures, the redefinition of poverty under late socialism, and urban cholera outbreaks. My book, Epidemic Politics in Contemporary Vietnam: Public Health and the State, was published in 2021 by Bloomsbury Academic. With Nhu Truong (UW Madison) and Peter Zinoman (UC Berkeley), I’m one of the editors-in-chief of the Journal of Vietnamese Studies.

My more recent research has addressed the practice of medical crowdfunding by cancer patients in the United States, with publications available and forthcoming in Medical Anthropology Quarterly and the Journal of Philanthropy. I have also published work on the cultural dimensions of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, with essays appearing in Open Anthropological Research and in the edited volumes "Evaluating a Pandemic" (World Scientific, 2023) and "Crisis, Inequity, and Legacy: Narrative Analyses of the COVID-19 Pandemic" (Oxford UP, forthcoming).

I am an enthusiastic practitioner of public scholarship and a current co-lead of the Bay Area chapter of the Scholars Strategy Network. My comments on the cultural and political drivers of the COVID-19 pandemic appeared in articles in national and international media including the BBC, The New York Times, and The Atlantic. My opinion essays on the COVID-19 pandemic have appeared in venues including Nature, The Hill, Le Grand Continent, USA Today, CNN, and The Nation. More recently, I have also commented for media and published opinion essays on the use of generative artificial intelligence technologies in higher education.