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In the wake of structural adjustment programs in the 1980s and
health reforms in the 1990s, the majority of sub-Saharan African
governments spend less than ten dollars per capita on health
annually, and many Africans have limited access to basic medical
care. Using a community-level approach, anthropologist Ellen E.
Foley analyzes the implementation of global health policies and how
they become intertwined with existing social and political
inequalities in Senegal. ""Your Pocket Is What Cures You"" examines
qualitative shifts in health and healing spurred by these reforms,
and analyzes the dilemmas they create for health professionals and
patients alike. It also explores how cultural frameworks,
particularly those stemming from Islam and Wolof ethnomedicine, are
central to understanding how people manage vulnerability to ill
health. While offering a critique of neoliberal health policies,
""Your Pocket Is What Cures You"" remains grounded in ethnography
to highlight the struggles of men and women who are precariously
balanced on twin precipices of crumbling health systems and
economic decline. Their stories demonstrate what happens when
market-based health reforms collide with material, political, and
social realities in African societies.
Drawing from the diverse fields of postcolonial studies, literary
studies, history, anthropology, sociology, political science,
environmental studies, and development studies, among others,
Gender and Sexuality in Senegalese Societies demonstrates the
urgency and necessity of new research in gender and queer studies
in and on Senegalese societies. By focusing on subjects that have
thus far been largely neglected in national and scholarly debates,
the chapters are subversive, complex, and inclusive, centering
within Senegalese studies themes and elements of alternative,
nonbinary, variant, and nonheteronormative gender identities,
sexualities, and voices. Contributors demonstrate that nationalist
and anticolonial discourses propelled by deep and lingering
socioeconomic inequalities have led, in postcolonial Senegal, to
vitriolic scapegoating of individuals and communities with variant
sexual and gender identities. The chapters in this volume look
inward to the voices and experiences of the Senegalese people to
challenge nationalist representations of advocacy for the
liberation of gender and sexual minorities in Senegal as a function
of a Western neocolonialist agenda.
In the wake of structural adjustment programs in the 1980s and
health reforms in the 1990s, the majority of sub-Saharan African
governments spend less than ten dollars per capita on health
annually, and many Africans have limited access to basic medical
care. Using a community-level approach, anthropologist Ellen E.
Foley analyzes the implementation of global health policies and how
they become intertwined with existing social and political
inequalities in Senegal. ""Your Pocket Is What Cures You"" examines
qualitative shifts in health and healing spurred by these reforms,
and analyzes the dilemmas they create for health professionals and
patients alike. It also explores how cultural frameworks,
particularly those stemming from Islam and Wolof ethnomedicine, are
central to understanding how people manage vulnerability to ill
health. While offering a critique of neoliberal health policies,
""Your Pocket Is What Cures You"" remains grounded in ethnography
to highlight the struggles of men and women who are precariously
balanced on twin precipices of crumbling health systems and
economic decline. Their stories demonstrate what happens when
market-based health reforms collide with material, political, and
social realities in African societies.
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