The vitality of practice: on personal trajectories.
Rethinking "emerging infectious diseases".
Invisible women: class, gender, and HIV.
The exotic and the mundane: human immunodeficiency virus in the Caribbean.
Culture, poverty, and HIV transmission: the case of rural Haiti. ; Miracles and misery: an ethnographic interlude.
Sending sickness: sorcery, politics, and changing concepts of AIDS in rural Haiti.
The consumption of the poor: tuberculosis in the late twentieth century.
Optimism and pessimism in tuberculosis control: lessons from rural Haiti.
Immodest claims of causality: social scientists and the "new" tuberculosis.
The persistent plagues: biological expressions of social inequalities.