Journal
BODY & SOCIETY
Volume 17, Issue 2-3, Pages 55-92Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1357034X11402858
Keywords
Brazil; human trafficking; mobility; neoliberal globalization; South Africa; tourism; Transplant
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Moshe Tati, a sanitation worker in Jerusalem, was among the first of more than a thousand mortally sick Israelis who signed up for illicit and clandestine 'transplant tour' packages that included: travel to an undisclosed foreign and exotic setting; five-star hotel accommodation; surgery in a private hospital unit; a 'fresh' kidney purchased from a perfect stranger trafficked from a third country. Although Tati's holiday turned into a nightmare and he had to be emergency air-lifted from a rented transplant unit in a private hospital in Adana, Turkey back to Israel, Moshe (now deceased) became a poster-boy of transplant tourism for the next decade. Joao Cavalcanti was among the first of 38 residents of the slums of Recife recruited by retired military Captain Ivan da Silva and his sidekick Captain Gadddy Tauber (of Israel) to travel to Durban, South Africa to provide a spare kidney to an Israeli transplant tourist in Durban. This article examines the logics and practices through which kidney buyers and kidney sellers, organs brokers, surgeons and their accessories convince themselves that they are engaged in an illegal but still mutually beneficial 'medical-recreational' adventure, an 'extrememedical sport' of sorts. While life, health and survival motivate 'transplant tourism', a euphemism for human trafficking in spare body parts, the freedom to roam, mobility, is an essential feature of transplant tours for kidney buyers and kidney sellers.
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