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Mobilizing bodies and body parts from Myanmar to Manipur: medical connections through borderlands in 'transition'

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posted on 2025-05-09, 00:29 authored by Duncan McDuie-RaDuncan McDuie-Ra
This article focuses on cross-border medical connections between Myanmar and Manipur (India). Non-state actors have been instrumental in creating the networks to bring bodies and body parts back and forth, first bypassing then enmeshing state actors. I focus on the movement of patients and medical samples across the border-from western Myanmar to Imphal city and back again-and the health infrastructure that enables it. Analyzing these connections makes several contributions to the study of border governance. First, movement is primarily from Myanmar to Manipur for treatment or diagnosis, and these connections project particular ways of thinking about each place-western Myanmar as poor and remote, Manipur as advanced and networked. Second, both Manipur and western Myanmar can be considered in 'transition'-as territories being recalibrated by political dynamics emanating elsewhere yet becoming connected through shared needs. Third, patients and samples move through territories controlled by paramilitary forces, underground groups, and different tribal councils. Routes are sometimes blocked or passage treacherous, testing the limits of conventional notions of bilateral border governance. Finally, cross-border medical connections between Manipur and Myanmar draw attention to the risky cross-border medical mobility of the poor. Rather than seeking to minimize cost, patients utilize Manipur's health infrastructure out of necessity, providing insights into the contours of cross-border medical care in times of transition.

History

Journal title

Modern Asian Studies

Volume

56

Issue

2

Pagination

691-714

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Human and Social Futures

School

School of Humanities, Creative Industries and Social Sciences

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