“…Drawing on Foucault, biopolitics is understood here as struggle over the exercise of biopower, a form of power concerned centrally with population health as an object of political calculation and contestation. Foucault traced the emergence of biopower in the eighteenth century to the newfound ability to use vital statistics to document and manage human population health and, by extension, human productivity (Smart 2002;Brooks 2005;Foucault 2008;Speake 2011). Significantly, both state and nonstate actors exercise biopower, which can be traced in various institutions that "coordinate medical care, centralize information, normalize knowledge .…”