![]() |
Volumn , Issue 80, 2001, Pages 76-100
|
Of oxford bags and twirling canes: the state, popular responses, and Zulu antimalaria assistants in the early-twentieth-century Zululand malaria campaigns.
a
a
NONE
|
Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
|
Indexed keywords
AFRICAN MEDICINE;
ARTICLE;
ECONOMICS;
EDUCATION;
EPIDEMIC;
ETHNOLOGY;
GOVERNMENT;
HISTORY;
LEGAL ASPECT;
MALARIA;
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECT;
PUBLIC HEALTH;
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE;
SOCIAL PROBLEM;
SOUTH AFRICA;
DISEASE OUTBREAKS;
GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS;
HISTORY, 20TH CENTURY;
MALARIA;
MEDICINE, AFRICAN TRADITIONAL;
PUBLIC HEALTH;
PUBLIC HEALTH ADMINISTRATION;
PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE;
RACE RELATIONS;
SOUTH AFRICA;
|
EID: 41449084775
PISSN: 01636545
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1215/01636545-2001-80-76 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (10)
|
References (0)
|