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ID168247
Title ProperFraming Local Attitudes to a Modern Health Intervention in the Neoliberal Order – Culturalism and Malaria Control in Southeastern Nigeria
LanguageENG
AuthorUgwu, Chidi
Summary / Abstract (Note)Interventionists usually blame cultural factors and traditional attitudes for non-compliance of target populations, a framework Didier Fassin terms as culturalism. Despite their efforts, what the Roll Back Malaria employees find in southeastern Nigeria is a ‘troubling’ nonchalance towards the programme because target populations’ perceptions of malaria differ from the donor/programme perspective. The RBM employees cast the local attitude as culturalism, accordingly framing their exhortations in terms of this discourse. How the Roll Back Malaria employees deployed culturalism to fit with the neoliberal individualizing framework of current international health practices is one more nuanced analytical perspective the article brings to intervention literature.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Asian and African Studies Vol. 54, No.7; Nov 2019: p.1048-1065
Journal SourceJournal of Asian and African Studies 2019-10 54, 7
Key WordsNeoliberalism ;  Culturalism ;  Global Health ;  Malaria Control ;  Southeastern Nigeria ;  Nsukka ;  Transnational Intervention