Africa Today
Questioning Digiltalization, Gender and Health
a cura di Selenia Marabello, Samuel Ntewusu
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Land, health and family – classical anthropological topics – are ethnographically investigated in relation to state interventions and power asymmetries in Accra, Kumasi (Ghana) Abidjan (Ivory Coast), and Liberia. The digitalization of land and
Land, health and family – classical anthropological topics – are ethnographically investigated in relation to state interventions and power asymmetries in Accra, Kumasi (Ghana) Abidjan (Ivory Coast), and Liberia. The digitalization of land and individual identity, social stigma and disease are questioned by intertwining fieldwork conducted in West Africa with larger cultural areas, thereby crossing the continent’s borders and imaginaries to address broader theoretical and ethical issues. How are gender and power relations deeply implicated in health, epidemics and moral stigma? How is personal/social identity being re-moulded by biometrics and neoliberal digitalization in contemporary societies? This book is one of the results of a shared engagement with mobility, teaching and research journey developed as part of the ACHIEVE-IT project. It forges a model of collaboration for joint future research, questioning technocratic or moral narratives such as efficiency, heroism, the family-as-safety-net, and agency. Moreover, by discussing ethnographic research practices, engagement, and forms of positionality, it invites students and practitioners alike to rethink anthropological knowledge and its potential.
In uscita
Informazioni
Indice
Introduction
Selenia Marabello, Samuel Ntewusu
I. Towards a social foundation of land administration digitalisation in Ghana
Peter Narh, Lamine Doumbia
II. The “biometric revolution”, Ivorian-style. Reflections on the National Registry of Natural Persons
Armando Cutolo
III. Ethical Concerns in Cultures of Family Caregiving: Evidence from a Feminist Ethnographic Study of Cancer in Ghana
Deborah Atobrah
IV. “Goodbye. And I hope not to see you again”. Research relations to be forgotten
Alessandra Gribaldo
V. Kinship, Stigma, and the Pursuit of Safety: Experiences of People Living with HIV in Ghana within the Context of New Treatment Guidelines and the UNAIDS 90-90-90 Targets
Benjamin K. Kwansa
VI. Healing from Stigma. Explanatory Narratives and Stigma Reduction Practices in the Medical Humanitarian Activities of Médecins Sans Frontières
Umberto Pellecchia
About the Authors





