Revelation or confirmation? The ‘fake probe’ in global health

Patricia Kingori, Rachel Douglas-Jones

    Publikation: Artikel i tidsskrift og konference artikel i tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningpeer review

    Abstract

    Fakes have become a matter of concern across global health. Commissioning inquiry into presumed fake practices in global health requires both a pre-existing sense of what would constitute real provision and a suspicion that it is not being offered. In this Position Piece, we analyse the research methods being used to identify and reveal other—presumed—fakes in global health provision. We put forward the concept of the ‘second-order fake’—the fake that is used to reveal a fake—to draw attention to the methodological politics at stake in the use of the fake. By reviewing historical cases of the creation of methods of deception, we analyse the assumptions they bring into global health from other disciplines. We foreground the promises of revelation that are embedded in probes that rely on fakes to uncover fakes. We suggest that despite the growing prevalence of methods which themselves deploy fakes to find fakes, these techniques bring us no closer to understanding the lived ambiguities of everyday practices of fakery.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftMedicine Anthropology Theory
    Vol/bind7
    Udgave nummer2
    Sider (fra-til)214-229
    Antal sider14
    ISSN2405-691X
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - 2020

    Emneord

    • Deception
    • Fake
    • Method
    • Probes
    • Global health

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