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Mirrored Views on Healing Systems in India :

Merging Policies, Politics and Practices

Séminaire international - Pondichéry, 19-20 avril 2004 - Les médecines en Inde : politiques et pratiques

Co-organisé par l’Institut Français de Pondichéry et la Foundation for the Revitalisation of Local Health Traditions (FRLHT), Bangalore, avec le soutien de Nomad RSI

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Présentation

 International Workshop On Mirrored views on healing systems in India, image 1 Indian medicines are a matter of concern for a variety of actors ranging from practitioners and users, to social scientists, activists and governmental planners. Each of them have specific views on, and positioning in, the health system and play a certain role in its configuration and dynamics. Indian medical plurality is thus closely interlinked in the social field, an examination of which would prove expedient for the understanding of medicines today. Each of the following themes will be discussed :

  • The commoditization of scholarly medicines : Indian medicines are characterized by an increasing urbanization and an expanding market for “traditional” health care. These contemporary trends apprise of the constitution of spaces of socio-medical vulnerability and inform on the social, epistemological and practical transformation of medicine. This further informs on the production and ideologies of modernity, and the way the latter are transcribed into medical practice and expressed through medicines.
  • Issues pertaining to the legality of medical practice : Deeply embedded in social and identity fields, the legal recognition of a given medicine is today an imperative to reach social and medical institutional legitimacy. It does, however, exist a number of tolerated practices which both nurtures and derive from the classical (legal) medicines. This panel will explore the social challenges, the national strategies and the normative implications of making a medicine legal.
  • The social role of the healers : Beside their medical activities, such individuals detain non-medical role in their community due to their status of healer or, say, birth attendant. Then, what is the social dimension and practice of a healer in today’s India when his or her practice has been supplanted by the emergence of biomedicine ? How do the practitioners negotiate their position within a dominated medical system ? And how this can be indicative, or not, of a need to revitalize healing practices when these are eroded ?

 International Workshop On Mirrored views on healing systems in India, image 2 This seminar, conceptually designed in a reflexive anthropological fashion, puts all actors at the center of the question, each of them being both subject and object. It will enable of an encounter between selected anthropologists, sociologists, researchers belonging to medical traditions and policy-makers so as to facilitate cross-fertilization and reciprocal understanding. It will finally examine, through the structure of the workshop itself and the themes developed therein, the social construction of medicine. The abolition of inter- (and intra-) disciplinary boundaries is part of the heuristic approach of this workshop.

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Intervenants

- Banerjee Madhulika (University of Delhi)
- Blaikie, Calum (NRU)
- Dekhang, Tsering Dorjee (Tibetan Medical and Astro Institute, Dharamsala) :
- Deliège, Robert (Université de Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium)
- Dhabai, Bhanwar (Jagran JanVikas Samiti, Udaipur)
- Gurmet, Padma (Amchi Medicine Research Unit - CCRAS, Ladakh)
- Hancart Petitet, Pascale (Université d’Aix-Marseille / NRU)
- Kalam M.A. (Madras University)
- Prasad, Purendra (University of Hyderabad)
- Pordié, Laurent (French Institute of Pondicherry / NRU)
- Ramani, Vaidya (Gandeepam Research Hospital)
- Shankar, Darshan (Foundation for the Revitalization of Local Health Traditions)
- Sujatha V. (Goa University)
- Taradatt, Shri (Dpt of AYUSH, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Delhi)
- Tirunarayanan, Vaidya (Centre for Traditional Medicine & Research, Madras)

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Programme

Day 1

9h50 AM Panel 1 : The social role of the healers

A study of possession in South India
Robert Deliège, University of Louvain-la-neuve

Practice and Politics of Medical Pluralism : A Study of Healers in West India
Purendra Prasad, University of Hyderabad

Notes on the sanitary, social and political stakes of traditional birth attendant’s training in India
Pascale Hancart-Petitet, University of Aix-Marseille

The challenges of reintroducing Tibetan medicine in a Himalayan nomadic pastoralist community
Calum Blaikie, Research Unit - Nomad RSI

2:00 PM Panel 2 : Social considerations on research applied to Indian medicines

An analysis of the role of research on Siddha medicine
Vaidya Tirunarayanan, Centre for Traditional Medicine & Research, Chennai

Siddha vs. AIDS : The social dimension of clinical research
V. Ramani, Gandeepam

Questioning research on the folk
Bhanwar Dhabai, Jagran JanVikas Samiti, Udaipur

4:00 PM Panel 3 : Issues on the legality of medical practices

The legality and legacy of the Indian System of Medicines
Shri Taradatt, Dpt of AYUSH, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Delhi

Achieving recognition of Sowa Rigpa in India : strategies and prospects
Padma Gurmet, Amchi Medicine Research Unit (CCRAS), Leh

Legality and medical legitimacy : contrasting views
Laurent Pordié, French Institute of Pondicherry /NRSI

Day 2

9:00 AM Panel 4 : Commercialisation and commoditization of scholastic medicines

A study of conservation and commercialisation in Tibetan medicine
Tsering Dorjee Dekhang, Tibetan Medical and Astro Institute, Dharamsala

Ayurveda in modern India : processes of standardization and the logics of pharmaceuticalization
Madhulika Banerjee, University of Delhi

Indigenous medicine in India and its modern avataar
V. Sujatha, Goa University

Medicalising Ayurveda : Shifting perceptions and worldviews
Leena Abraham, Tata Institute of Social Sciences

11:30 AM Panel 5 : Tangling the threads : Healing as a social, medical, economic and legal practice

The contemporary relevance of village-based healers
Darshan Shankar, Foundation for the Revitalization of Local Health Traditions

Anthropological thoughts on the current state of healing in India
M.A. Kalam, Madras University

2:00 PM Using research for action : Strategy & Action Plan

Based on the result presented in the workshop, this section will intend to develop a collective strategy and action plan for coordinating the various efforts in the field of healing in India. Potential projects and partnerships will be discussed, as well as the options for collective fund raising.

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Liste des séminaires

  1. Faults and Flaws Therapeutic Practices Against the Norm in South Asia
  2. Savoir thérapeutique et matières médicinales dans le monde tibétain. Perspectives en sciences sociales
  3. Health and Social Harmony : An interactive seminar for health actors
  4. Mirrored Views on Healing Systems in India : Merging Policies, Politics and Practices
  5. Lectures on Tibetan Medicine : Social Change, Economy and Development
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