Governing sexual citizens: Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland

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Governing sexual citizens : Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland. / Rud, Søren.

In: Scandinavian Journal of History, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rud, S 2021, 'Governing sexual citizens: Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland', Scandinavian Journal of History. https://doi.org/10.1080/03468755.2021.1991468

APA

Rud, S. (2021). Governing sexual citizens: Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland. Scandinavian Journal of History. https://doi.org/10.1080/03468755.2021.1991468

Vancouver

Rud S. Governing sexual citizens: Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland. Scandinavian Journal of History. 2021. https://doi.org/10.1080/03468755.2021.1991468

Author

Rud, Søren. / Governing sexual citizens : Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland. In: Scandinavian Journal of History. 2021.

Bibtex

@article{e6efeb05cab445799eec23acd09f900c,
title = "Governing sexual citizens: Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland",
abstract = "In the post-WWII decolonization era, the prospect of an open, decolonized Greenland, with unrestricted mobility for inhabitants, intensified medical experts{\textquoteright} pre-existing concerns over sexually transmitted diseases. During the colonial phase, medical and administrative authorities could govern Greenlanders as subjects and accordingly control their mobility and interactions with Europeans. However, the decolonization agenda threatened to undermine this situation. Greenland could no longer remain a colony, enclosed and sealed off from the rest of world by trade monopoly and strict limitations on access to the country imposed by the Danish authorities. Doctors were concerned by two impending shifts that threatened to undermine efforts to control sexually transmitted diseases. First, Greenland{\textquoteright}s decolonized status would entail more or less free access to the country. Second, after decolonization, Greenlanders would have the status as citizens, and authorities could no longer govern them as (colonial) subjects. This paper demonstrates how medical authorities struggled with the Greenlanders{\textquoteright} transition from controllable (sexual) subjects to rights-bearing (sexual) citizens. The paper provides a fresh perspective concerning this watershed moment, between colonialism and the process of decolonization in Greenland.",
author = "S{\o}ren Rud",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1080/03468755.2021.1991468",
language = "English",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of History",
issn = "0346-8755",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Governing sexual citizens

T2 - Decolonization and venereal disease in Greenland

AU - Rud, Søren

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - In the post-WWII decolonization era, the prospect of an open, decolonized Greenland, with unrestricted mobility for inhabitants, intensified medical experts’ pre-existing concerns over sexually transmitted diseases. During the colonial phase, medical and administrative authorities could govern Greenlanders as subjects and accordingly control their mobility and interactions with Europeans. However, the decolonization agenda threatened to undermine this situation. Greenland could no longer remain a colony, enclosed and sealed off from the rest of world by trade monopoly and strict limitations on access to the country imposed by the Danish authorities. Doctors were concerned by two impending shifts that threatened to undermine efforts to control sexually transmitted diseases. First, Greenland’s decolonized status would entail more or less free access to the country. Second, after decolonization, Greenlanders would have the status as citizens, and authorities could no longer govern them as (colonial) subjects. This paper demonstrates how medical authorities struggled with the Greenlanders’ transition from controllable (sexual) subjects to rights-bearing (sexual) citizens. The paper provides a fresh perspective concerning this watershed moment, between colonialism and the process of decolonization in Greenland.

AB - In the post-WWII decolonization era, the prospect of an open, decolonized Greenland, with unrestricted mobility for inhabitants, intensified medical experts’ pre-existing concerns over sexually transmitted diseases. During the colonial phase, medical and administrative authorities could govern Greenlanders as subjects and accordingly control their mobility and interactions with Europeans. However, the decolonization agenda threatened to undermine this situation. Greenland could no longer remain a colony, enclosed and sealed off from the rest of world by trade monopoly and strict limitations on access to the country imposed by the Danish authorities. Doctors were concerned by two impending shifts that threatened to undermine efforts to control sexually transmitted diseases. First, Greenland’s decolonized status would entail more or less free access to the country. Second, after decolonization, Greenlanders would have the status as citizens, and authorities could no longer govern them as (colonial) subjects. This paper demonstrates how medical authorities struggled with the Greenlanders’ transition from controllable (sexual) subjects to rights-bearing (sexual) citizens. The paper provides a fresh perspective concerning this watershed moment, between colonialism and the process of decolonization in Greenland.

U2 - 10.1080/03468755.2021.1991468

DO - 10.1080/03468755.2021.1991468

M3 - Journal article

JO - Scandinavian Journal of History

JF - Scandinavian Journal of History

SN - 0346-8755

ER -

ID: 273539895