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Genocide by a million paper cuts

Nursing Inquiry 26 (3):e12314 (2019)

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  1. Toward decolonizing nursing: the colonization of nursing and strategies for increasing the counter‐narrative.Elizabeth McGibbon, Fhumulani M. Mulaudzi, Paula Didham, Sylvia Barton & Ann Sochan - 2014 - Nursing Inquiry 21 (3):179-191.
    Although there are notable exceptions, examination of nursing's participation in colonizing processes and practices has not taken hold in nursing's consciousness or political agenda. Critical analyses, based on the examination of politics and power of the structural determinants of health, continue to be marginalized in the profession. The goals of this discussion article are to underscore the urgent need to further articulate postcolonial theory in nursing and to contribute to nursing knowledge about paths to work toward decolonizing the profession. The (...)
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  • The influence of gender, ethnicity, class, race, the women’s and labour movements on the development of nursing in Sri Lanka.Dilmi Aluwihare-Samaranayake & Pauline Paul - 2013 - Nursing Inquiry 20 (2):133-144.
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  • The National Socialist Sisterhood: an instrument of National Socialist health policy.Christoph Schweikardt - 2009 - Nursing Inquiry 16 (2):103-110.
    When Adolf Hitler (1889–1945) came to power in 1933, the new Nazi government focused the German health system on their priorities such as the creation of a racially homogeneous society and the preparation of war. One of the measures to bring nursing under their control was the foundation of a new sisterhood. In 1934, Erich Hilgenfeldt (1897–1945), the ambitious head of the National Socialist People’s Welfare Association (Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt), founded the National Socialist (NS) Sisterhood (Nationalsozialistische Schwesternschaft) to create an elite (...)
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  • Heroines of lonely outposts or tools of the empire? British nurses in Britain's model colony: Ceylon, 1878-1948.Margaret Jones - 2004 - Nursing Inquiry 11 (3):148-160.
    In 1878 two ‘Nightingale’ nurses arrived in the British colony of Ceylon to initiate a training programme for indigenous women in the skills and values of what was then termed ‘scientific nursing’. These two women were the first of a succession of British women who went to the colony to nurse in its hospitals and to train Ceylonese women for the profession. Using the official records of the colonial government held in the National Archives, Kew and the records of the (...)
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  • Nurses and the sterilization experiments of Auschwitz: a postmodernist perspective.Susan Benedict & Jane M. Georges - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (4):277-288.
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