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Research ArticleArticles

Plants into Pills

The World Health Organization and Fertility Regulation for Sovereign Futures in the 1970s

Joshua Mentanko
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals, February 2024, 65 (2) 266-289; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/hopp.65.2.266
Joshua Mentanko
Institute for History at Leiden University
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History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals: 65 (2)
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals
Vol. 65, Issue 2
1 Feb 2024
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Plants into Pills
Joshua Mentanko
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals Feb 2024, 65 (2) 266-289; DOI: 10.3368/hopp.65.2.266

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Plants into Pills
Joshua Mentanko
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals Feb 2024, 65 (2) 266-289; DOI: 10.3368/hopp.65.2.266
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • Bioprospecting and Postcolonial Sovereignty: Indian Influences on the Task Force
    • Colonial Expectations and Postcolonial Realities of Industrial Pharmaceutical Research
    • Self‐Reliance without Isolationism: Resource, Population, and Technology in the 1970s
    • Conclusion: Plants, Population, and the Ironies of Pharmaceutical Worldmaking after Empire
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Keywords

  • medicinal plants
  • pharmacognosy
  • World Health Organization
  • Mexico
  • India
  • population control
  • fertility regulation
  • industrial development
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