Archive/Anthropology in One Health
Anthropology in One Health
Nicolas Lainé
8 de julio de 2026
en

Abstract

Anthropology in One Health refers to the use of anthropological concepts, methods and field-based approaches to analyse health problems at the intersections of humans, animals, plants, microbes and environments. It examines how disease, risk, care, surveillance and prevention are understood, negotiated and organised in specific social and ecological settings. Its contribution is not simply to add a “social dimension” to biological problems already defined elsewhere. It also asks how a health problem is framed in the first place, whose observations are recognised as evidence, and how different ways of describing a situation shape the interventions that become possible. In this entry, One Health is approached primarily as a collaborative field of practice rather than as a single theoretical concept, bringing together ethnography, medical anthropology, political ecology, multispecies approaches, ethnobiology and studies of Indigenous and local knowledge.

IPC Classification

A61A01

Keywords

anthropologyhealthencyclopediarefersanthropologicalconceptsfield-basedapproachesanalyseproblemsintersectionshumansanimalsplantsmicrobesenvironmentsexaminesdiseaseriskcaresurveillancepreventionunderstoodnegotiated
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