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Southern exposure: levelling the Northern tilt in global medical and medical humanities education

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Abstract

Global medical education is dominated by a Northern tilt. Global universities’ faculty and students dominate research, scholarship and teaching about what is termed global education. This tilt has been fixed in global biomedical education with some acknowledgement from the Global South of the comparative benefits of global exchange. Student exchange is predominantly North to South. Students from the Global South are less likely to visit the North on global medical education visits. Global indigenous and traditional ways of knowing rooted may be suppressed, hidden or misappropriated and repackaged for consumption in the Global South with Global North ways of knowing as a reference point. A global history of colonization has shaped this trend influencing postcolonial theorists and decolonial activists to question the legitimacy and depose the influence of dominant Global North ideas. This is evident in how communication skills, reflective practice and narratives are presented and taught. Global North students must be introduced to Global South ways of knowing before visiting the Global South from a position of critical consciousness. Emancipatory education is best led by transformative Global North–South dialogue.

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Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank the anonymous reviewers and Dr. Arno Kumagai (University of Toronto) for discussions that led to the development of this paper.

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Naidu, T. Southern exposure: levelling the Northern tilt in global medical and medical humanities education. Adv in Health Sci Educ 26, 739–752 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10459-020-09976-9

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