Amphithéâtre Marguerite de Navarre, Site Marcelin Berthelot
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Abstract

Over the last twenty years, the compilation of morbidity and mortality figures has become standard practice in aid organizations. Morbidity and mortality surveys are usually carried out for practical reasons. Measuring the prevalence of malnutrition or measles after an immunization campaign, assessing an infant mortality rate, locating an outbreak of intestinal infections all help to decide priorities and ensure the impact of a health strategy. However, these figures are also communication tools used to draw the media's attention to certain situations in order to put them on the agenda of political decision-makers. Statistical data are now at the heart of political controversies. Recent debates on the conflicts in Darfur (Sudan), Kivu (DRVC) and Iraq suggest that the more this quantitative turn is accentuated, the more it lends itself to political and legal manipulation. This talk will examine the relationship between the analysis and presentation of conflict mortality data, on the one hand, and, on the other, the meaning of such data in the various forums in which it is presented.

Rony Brauman

Rony Brauman, born in 1950, is a medical doctor with degrees in epidemiology and tropical medicine. After working for several years as a field doctor, he became President of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in 1982, a position he held until 1994. His work focuses on the politics of humanitarian action, and more specifically on humanitarian practices and discourse in situations of conflict and natural disaster. He is currently Director of Studies at the Fondation Médecins Sans Frontières, Associate Professor at the IEP Paris and Director of the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI), University of Manchester (UK). He is a columnist for the quarterly magazine Alternatives Internationales.

Speaker(s)

Rony Brauman

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