Ï㽶ÊÓƵ

Event

Medicare@50

Thursday, October 10, 2019 16:00to17:30
Donald E. Armstrong Building Armstrong Building, 3420 McTavish Room 060, 3420 rue McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 3L1, CA

This talk with David Wright is part of our Fall 2019 Policy Lectures Series. These academic talks are intended for McGill graduate students and faculty.

This event will be held in Room 060 of the Armstrong Building (3420 McTavish (former location of the McGill Bookstore). Please note that there is no public access to room 060 from the Armstrong Building. To access room 060 please do so via the Bronfman Building (1001 SHerbrooke), through a small corridor on the lower level.

This talk will discuss the successes and failures of universal health care in Canada, placed in broader Anglo-American historical perspective.

About David Wright

David Wright received his BA and MA in History from Ï㽶ÊÓƵ and his DPhil (in History) from the University of Oxford. As a post-doctoral research fellow at Oxford he specialized in the history of health and medicine before being appointed Wellcome Trust Lecturer in the History of Medicine at the University of Nottingham (1996-99). In 1999, David returned to Canada to become the Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine at McMaster University, a cross-appointment between the medical school and the History department. During his eleven years at McMaster, David was active in several administrative capacities, including Chair of the international Society for the Social History of Medicine (SSHM), Associate Dean (Vice-Dean) of the Faculty of Humanities, and Chair of McMaster’s University Curriculum Committee.

David joined the Department (in 2011) as Professor of History, cross-appointed to the Institute for Health and Social Policy (Faculty of Medicine). He has two areas of research interest. For most of the past twenty years, he has researched and published on the history of mental disorders (with a particular expertise in the history of mental hospitals), resulting in several books and edited volumes. More recently, he has led a research team investigating the transnational migration of physicians in the second half of the twentieth century. He welcomes all expressions of interest from graduate students and post-doctoral applicants as he assembles an interdisciplinary research team spanning both Faculties.

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