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Conclusion Dealing with Difference and the Movement of Method
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Published:September 2023
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Abstract
The concluding chapter returns to the question of the dissemination or “diffusion” of MI, this time with its international travels in focus. Highlighted here are MI’s claims to be a universally legible practice, which speaks to the “same heart” wherever it travels and whoever it encounters there. This universalist narrative is considered alongside North American MINTies’ accounts of training around the globe, whether on their trips Tanzania to train HIV workers or China to train doctors in smoking cessation, Skype sessions with Estonian novices, or their receipt of U.S. State Department grants to teach MI to Iraqi public health workers charged with identifying victims of state torture. These MI trainers’ accounts of their international work suggest that sometimes MI spirit meets limit conditions, though they have different ways of making sense of and grappling with this challenge. With the preceding chapters in mind, which demonstrate MI’s American character, the chapter homes in on the question of what is at stake for MI to recognize its ethno-national character. Along the way, the chapter works between the profession of anthropology and the practice of MI, suggesting that these dilemmas are shared as are possibilities for just and satisfying resolution.
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