151 research outputs found

    Navigating ‘taxation’ on the Congo River: the interplay of legitimation and ‘officialisation’

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    Based on comprehensive research among boat operators and navy personnel working on the Congo River (DRC), this article explores how assessments of ‘taxation’ are shaped by the interplay of legitimation and ‘officialisation’. As such, it draws upon and contributes to scholarly debates on taxpayers’ attitudes towards taxation. While boat operators resent having to pay a plethora of authorities, including the navy, along the Congo River, the article demonstrates how they locate these ‘taxes’ on a spectrum from more to less legitimate. These assessments are shaped by various factors: authorities’ legitimacy as ‘measured’ by their official mandate and importance; public and non-official service provision; and the deployment of symbols of ‘stateness’. In interaction, these factors legitimise and ‘officialise’ ‘taxes’ by the navy that are prohibited in legislation. These findings caution against the a priori use of the labels ‘official’ and ‘non-official’, emphasising the need to better grasp these notions’ emic understandings

    Flagships and tumbleweed: A history of the politics of gender justice work in Oxfam GB 1986–2015

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    This article contributes to scholarship on the political nature of feminists’ work in international development NGOs. The case study of Oxfam GB (OGB) is contemporary history, based on compiling a brief history of gender justice work between 1986 and 2014 and 18 months of part-time participant-observation fieldwork during 2014–15. I describe funding pressures and imperatives, contestations of meaning and power struggles within OGB and argue that gender justice becomes entangled in both internal and the external politics of international development. This is part of a wider research programme about how ideas on gender equality norms travel between and around development organizations, so I finally draw conclusions about how norms are contested and embodied. The shapeshifting political nature of feminist work challenges prevailing theories about how norms and ideas travel and take hold within organizations

    Brokering justice: global indigenous rights and struggles over hydropower in Nepal

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    This article explores the dynamics of brokerage at the intersection between the justice conceptions enshrined in global norms and the notions of justice asserted in specific socio-environmental struggles. Using the case of a small hydropower project in Nepal, we trace the attempts of an indigenous activist to enrol villagers in his campaign against the background of villagers’ everyday negotiations with the hydropower company. The study shows how global norms, such as indigenous peoples’ rights, may fail to gain traction on the ground or even become sources of injustice in particular contexts

    Social and cultural dimensions of hygiene in Cambodian health care facilities

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The frequency of bloodborne pathogen healthcare-associated infections is thought to be high in developing Southeast Asian Countries. The underlying social-cultural logics contributing to the risks of transmission are rarely studied. This report provides some insights on the social and cultural factors that shape hygiene practices in Cambodian health care settings.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We conducted qualitative surveys in various public and private health facilities in Phnom Penh, the capital city and in provinces. We observed and interviewed 319 participants, health care workers and patients, regarding hygiene practices and social relationships amongst the health care staff and with patients. We also examined the local perceptions of hygiene, their impact on the relationships between the health care staff and patients, and perceptions of transmission risks. Data collection stem from face to face semi-structured and open-ended interviews and focus group discussions with various health care staffs (i.e. cleaners, nurses, midwives and medical doctors) and with patients who attended the study health facilities.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Overall responses and observations indicated that hygiene practices were burdened by the lack of adequate materials and equipements. In addition, many other factors were identified to influence and distort hygiene practices which include (1) informal and formal social rapports in hospitals, (2) major infection control roles played by the cleaners in absence of professional acknowledgment. Moreover, hygiene practices are commonly seen as an unessential matter to be devoted to low-ranking staff.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our anthropological findings illustrate the importance of comprehensive understanding of hygiene practices; they need to be considered when designing interventions to improve infection control practices in a Cambodian medical setting.</p

    Jovens e associaçÔes em Moçambique: motivaçÔes e dinùmicas actuais

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    O presente artigo Ă© uma reflexĂŁo sobre dinĂąmicas associativas de jovens no Moçambique pĂłs colonial. O objectivo desta reflexĂŁo foi identificar e analisar as motivaçÔes de engajamento dos jovens nesses agrupamentos. Baseando-se em aproximaçÔes empĂ­ricas feitas a duas associaçÔes de jovens - Associação Aro Juvenil e Associação Positiva Juvenil - a anĂĄlise demonstra que dinamica associativa de jovens mete em evidĂȘncia relaçÔes complexas entre identidade, contexto, o privado, o pĂșblico e o afectivo. Embora haja mĂșltiplas motivaçÔes, a adesĂŁo dos jovens em associaçÔes associa trajectĂłrias e expectativas individualizadas. A nĂ­vel discursivo, a entrada na vida associativa representa uma forma de legitimação sĂłciopolĂ­tica em resposta a um discurso que considera os jovens passivos e pouco intervenientes na solução dos problemas que lhes afecta em particular e Ă  sociedade no geral. A nĂ­vel das prĂĄticas associativas quotidianas, os jovens reintrepretam e dĂŁo outro sentido Ă s motivaçÔes do seu engajamento: para lĂĄ dos objectivos formais, pretensamente desenvolvimentistas, altruistas e humanitĂĄrios, o associativismo Ă© uma estratĂ©gia de vida e de realização de projectos individuais. Criar uma associação e/ou nela aderir pode significar maiores possibilidades de aceder e controlar recursos e capitais diversificados como emprego/profissĂŁo, dinheiro, trabalho, poder, reconhecimento e prestigio, formaçÔes entre outros que de outra forma nĂŁo seria possĂ­vel.This article reflects on youth associations dynamics in Postcolonial Mozambique. The aim is to identify and analyze motivations for young people's involvement in such groups. Based on empirical work with two youth associations - namely "Associação Aro Juvenil" and "Associação Positiva Juvenil" - the assessment finds that youth associations dynamics highlights intricate relationships involving identity, context, private, public and affective milieus. Although there are multiple motivations, young people's adherence to associations is combined with individual life stories and expectations. At the discourse level, entrance to the associative life represents a form of socio-political legitimation in response to other narratives that consider young people very passive and less intervening in finding solutions to their own problems, and society's in general. At the level of day-to-day practices, young people re-interpret and give a different sense to their motivations and commitment: beyond formal objectives - arguably development-oriented, altruistic and humanistic - associations are a life strategy for the accomplishment of individual achievements. To create an association and/or take part in one may imply greater possibilities of accessing and controlling diversified resources and capitals, such as a job/occupation, money, work, power, recognition, prestige, and training, among others, which would be otherwise impossible

    Norms, Networks, Power, and Control: Understanding Informal Payments and Brokerage in Cross-Border Trade in Sierra Leone

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    Recent research has cast light on the variety of informal payments and practices that govern the day-to-day interactions between traders and customs agents at border posts in low-income countries. Building on this literature, this paper draws on survey and qualitative evidence in an effort to explore which groups are most advantaged and disadvantaged by the largely informal processes and norms governing cross-border trade. We find that understanding variation in strategies and outcomes across traders can only be effectively understood with reference to the importance of norms, networks, power, and the logic of control.Department for International DevelopmentBill and Melinda Gates Foundatio
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