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Organized by the Institute for Advanced Study, the Department of Anthropology, and the Program in the History of Medicine at the University of Minnesota.

Can rich people’s medicines and poor people’s medicines “really” be the same? This is the question that consumers in Mexico started asking with the arrival of generic medicines on the commercial landscape in the early 2000s. The same but (similar), the same but (cheaper), the same but (different): consumers of generics there and elsewhere have repeatedly been asked to confront --and have articulated-- the rich heterogeneity of sameness to itself. Through the lens of ongoing ethnographic work in Mexico, the project on which this talk draws explores the implications of this strange kind of abundance (that is, not just of 'copied drugs,' but of kinds of equivalence itself), for how we think about markets, politics, and access to health.

Cori Hayden is a professor of Anthropology and the Director of the Center for Science, Technology, Medicine & Society at the University of California, Berkeley. Her current research is an ethnographic investigation of the recent emergence of generic drugs in Mexico, and the complex relationships—simultaneously biochemical, commercial, and political— unfolding in their name. She is the author of When Nature Goes Public: The Making and Unmaking of Bioprospecting in Mexico.

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Added by UMN Institute for Advanced Study on April 10, 2012