A Future beyond HIV/AIDS? Health as a Political Commodity in Botswana
Astrid Bochow ()
Africa Spectrum, 2015, vol. 50, issue 1, 25-47
Abstract:
Referencing scholarly debates on humanitarianism and specifically HIV interventions, this article analyses the commodification of health in Botswana’s political arena throughout the HIV pandemic and beyond, contributing to a re-evaluation of the distribution of public wealth and international support in welfare states in Africa. The starting point of the analysis is a project to build a private hospital – a move to create a centre of excellence exclusive of international HIV/AIDS donations – and the staging of political responsibilities around it. Public investment into private health is an attempt to reform infrastructures built with HIV/AIDS money and to develop a market of high-paying jobs within the country. This process transforms the inalienable and indivisible condition of health and survival into a political commodity.
Keywords: humanitarian foreign aid; welfare state; political economy; public health policy; HIV/AIDS (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015-04
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