Mariola Espinosa's historical analysis examines yellow fever epidemics in Cuba from 1878 to 1930. The work situates disease control within political, military, and economic contexts, revealing its role in U.S. colonial influence. It argues sanitation programs were not charitable but served to eliminate threats to U.S. expansion.
Use Cases
- Analyzing the political impact of epidemics based on historical context described
- Studying colonial public health interventions based on the sanitation program narrative
- Examining the relationship between disease control and economic domination as described
Strengths
- Focuses on a specific historical period (1878-1930)
- Integrates analysis across political, military, and economic contexts as described
Limitations
- Data format and structure are unknown; it likely contains textual historical analysis
- Row count and column-level documentation are absent; field semantics must be inferred
Provenance
- Source
- Mariola Espinosa
- Time Range
- 1878-1930
- Geography
- Cuba, Southern United States