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Benedikte Victoria Lindskog
Benedikte V. Lindskog is an Associate Professor in Medical Anthropology at Oslo Metropolitan University and senior researcher in three externally funded projects at the University of Oslo and Oslo University Hospital: The MiPreg Study – closing the gap in maternity care to migrant women in Oslo; The PRESHA study - PREventing Severe Hypertensive Adverse events in pregnancy and childbirth; and the ARC-project Mongolian Medicine: Different modes of multispecies knowledge transmission. Her most recent publications on Mongolia include: ‘Managing Uncertainty, Beckoning Security: Ritual Offerings to a Local Ovoo in Mongolia’, Ethnos (2019); Fjeld, H. & B. V. Lindskog. ‘The Principle of Separation: Human and Non-human Relations in Tibet and Mongolia’, in Humans Enmeshed: The Human Condition in Extended Socialities, Remme & Sillander (eds.), Cambridge University Press (2017); ‘Ritualised offerings to ovoos among nomadic Halh herders of west-central Mongolia’, Études Mongoles & Sibériennes, Centrasiatiques & Tibétaines, EMSCAT (2016).
Mongolia, Inner Asia, Medical Anthropology, environmental health, migration, global and reproductive health. social- and ritual organization