There has been an extensive historiographical debate on the role of  Western or allopathic medicine in the colonial context. However, most of the  literature concentrates on the implementation and significance of public health  measures, mental health institutions and the control of epidemic diseases; the  role of hospitals per se in this policy transfer has so far not commanded equal  attention. An analysis of the medical, cultural and socio-political aspects of  hospital development in the colonial context is essential for an understanding  of the contribution of Western medicine to the health of indigenous populations  and its role in the imperial project.
  This book breaks new ground in its exploration of the development of the  hospital system in Sri Lanka  from the beginning of British rule in 1815 through to the post-colonial  period.  Jones consults the records of  the colonial and imperial governments, the archives of the International Health  Division of the Rockefeller Foundation, the American Ceylon Mission and the  World Health Organisation. In so doing she examines government, mission and  philanthropic initiatives in the provision of medical services and suggests  that while the hospital system was the  driving force behind the establishment of free health care as a right of  citizenship it also devoured the limited resources available for health care as  a whole. 
This book is a welcome addition to the growing  literature on imperial and colonial medicine and will appeal to historians of  medicine, medical institutions and to historians of Sri   Lanka through its contribution to the analysis of Sri Lanka’s  post-colonial interventionist state. It will also be of interest to researchers  in development and international health.