Internationalism and nationalism: the Rockefeller Foundation, public health, and malaria in Italy, 1923-1951 |
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Authors: | Stapleton D H |
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Affiliation: | Rockefeller Archive Center, Sleepy Hollow, 15 Dayton Avenue, NY 10591, USA. stapled@rockvax.rockefeller.edu |
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Abstract: | The Rockefeller Foundation's support of malaria control and public health in Italy over three decades, the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, was one of the foundation's most successful collaborations in its history. Nearly one-sixth of the funds the Rockefeller Foundation allocated for malaria programs was spent in Italy in those years. Outstanding research, a new and important institution, and decided improvements in public health were historically-significant results. The three most important episodes of this American-Italian relationship were the operations of the Stazione Sperimentale per la Lotta Antimalarica, the founding of the Istituto Superiore di Sanità, and the campaign to eradicate mosquitoes in Sardinia. In each of these episodes there was a tension between the international aspects and national aspects of the partnership that to some degree limited its success. |
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