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Hannah Brown - Volunteer Economies: The Politics and Ethics of Voluntary Labour in Africa

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Across Africa today, as development activities animate novel forms of governance, new social actors are emerging, among them the volunteer. Yet, where work and resources are limited, volunteer practices have repercussions that raise contentious ethical issues. What has been the real impact of volunteers economically, politically and in society? The interdisciplinary experts in this collection examine the practices of volunteers - both international and local - and ideologies of volunteerism. They show the significance of volunteerism to processes of social and economic transformation, and political projects of national development and citizenship, as well as to individual aspirations in African societies. These case studies - from South Africa, Lesotho, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Sierra Leone and Malawi - examine everyday experiences of volunteerism and trajectories of voluntary work, trace its broader historical, political and economic implications, and situate African experiences of voluntary labour within global exchanges and networks of resources, ideas and political technologies. Offering insights into changing configurations of work, citizenship, development and social mobility, the authors offer new perspectives on the relations between labour, identity and social value in Africa. Ruth Prince is Associate Professor in Medical Anthropology at the University of Oslo; with her co-author Wenzel Geissler, she won the 2010 Amaury Talbot Prize for their book The Land is Dying: Contingency, Creativity and Conflict in Western Kenya. Hannah Brown is a lecturer in Anthropology at Durham University.

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Across Africa today as development activities animate novel forms of - photo 1
Across Africa today as development activities animate novel forms of - photo 2
Across Africa today, as development activities animate novel forms of governance, new social actors are emerging, among them the volunteer. Yet, where work and resources are limited, volunteer practices have repercussions that raise contentious ethical issues. What has been the real impact of volunteers economically, politically and in society? The interdisciplinary experts in this collection examine the practices of volunteers both international and local and ideologies of volunteerism. They show the significance of volunteerism to processes of social and economic transformation, and political projects of national development and citizenship, as well as to individual aspirations in African societies.
These case studies from South Africa, Lesotho, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Sierra Leone and Malawi examine everyday experiences of volunteerism and trajectories of voluntary work, trace its broader historical, political and economic implications, and situate African experiences of voluntary labour within global exchanges and networks of resources, ideas and political technologies. Offering insights into changing configurations of work, citizenship, development and social mobility, the authors offer new perspectives on the relations between labour, identity and social value in Africa.
Ruth Prince is Associate Professor in Medical Anthropology at the University of Oslo; with her co-author Wenzel Geissler, she won the 2010 Amaury Talbot Prize for their book The Land is Dying: Contingency, Creativity and Conflict in Western Kenya. Hannah Brown is a lecturer in Anthropology at Durham University.
AFRICAN ISSUES
Picture 3
Volunteer Economies RUTH PRINCE & HANNAH BROWN (EDS)
Africas Land Rush RUTH HALL, IAN SCOONES & DZODZI TSIKATA (EDS)
The Development State MAIA GREEN
Africa Rising? IAN TAYLOR
Losing your Land AN ANSOMS AND THEA HILHORST
Chinas Aid & Soft Power in Africa KENNETH KING
South Africas Gold Mines & the Politics of Silicosis JOCK McCULLOCH
From the Pit to the Market DIANE FROST
Sudan Looks East DANIEL LARGE & LUKE A. PATEY (EDS)
The Front Line Runs Through Every Woman ELEANOR O GORMAN
The Root Causes of Sudans Civil Wars DOUGLAS H. JOHNSON
Zimbabwes Land Reform IAN SCOONES, NELSON MARONGWE, BLASIO MAVEDZENGE, JACOB MAHENEHENE, FELIX MURIMBARIMBA & CHRISPEN SUKUME
Identity Economics KATE MEAGHER
The Ethiopian Red Terror Trials KJETIL TRONVOLL, CHARLES SCHAEFER & GIRMACHEW ALEMU ANEME (EDS)
Diamonds, Dispossession & Democracy in Botswana KENNETH GOOD
Peace without Profit JOSEPH HANLON
The Lie of the Land MELISSA LEACH & ROBIN MEARNS (EDS)
Fighting for the Rainforest PAUL RICHARDS
Published in the US & Canada by Indiana University Press
Gender & Genocide in Burundi PATRICIA O. DALEY
Guns & Governance in the Rift Valley KENNEDY MKUTU
Becoming Somaliland MARK BRADBURY
Undermining Development SARAH MICHAEL
Letting them Die CATHERINE CAMPBELL
Somalia: Economy Without State PETER D. LITTLE
Asbestos Blues JOCK McCULLOCH
Killing for Conservation ROSALEEN DUFFY
Mozambique & the Great Flood of 2000 FRANCES CHRISTIE & JOSEPH HANLON
Angola: Anatomy of an Oil State TONY HODGES
Congo-Paris JANET MACGAFFEY & REMY BAZENGUISSA-GANGA
Africa Works PATRICK CHABAL & JEAN-PASCAL DALOZ
The Criminalization of the State in Africa JEAN-FRANOIS BAYART, STEPHEN ELLIS & BEATRICE HIBOU
Famine Crimes ALEX DE WAAL
CONTENTS RUTH PRINCE HANNAH BROWN CHRISTOPHER J COLVIN ANN KELLY PROSPER - photo 4
CONTENTS
RUTH PRINCE & HANNAH BROWN
CHRISTOPHER J. COLVIN
ANN KELLY & PROSPER CHAKI
STLE WIG
BIRGITTE BRUUN
MICHAEL JENNINGS
NOELLE SULLIVAN
CLAIRE WENDLAND, SUSAN L. ERIKSON & NOELLE SULLIVAN
BJRN HALLSTEIN HOLTE
THOMAS G. KIRSCH
PETER REDFIELD
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
is a Lecturer in Anthropology at Durham University. She has a longstanding research interest in Kenya, where she has worked on issues of health care and health governance, caring relations within and beyond institutions, modes of developmental governance, and health systems bureaucracies. Her current research centres on zoonotic diseases and epidemic management in Sierra Leone, with a particular focus on Lassa fever and Ebola virus disease. She has recently published a focus on Volunteer Labour in East Africa with Ruth Prince in African Studies Review .
is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen, and holds a PhD in anthropology from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine where she was a member of the Anthropologies of African Biosciences research group. She has carried out ethnographic research on health in Ghana, Malawi and Zambia, where her doctoral research explored trajectories of lay engagement in transnational medical research projects.
is an entomologist based at the Ifakara Health Institute in Dar es Salaam. His research interests include urban malaria control. He has written about community-based programmes for malaria control in Tanzania and published in Human Resources for Health and Malaria Journal .
is a Senior Research Officer and Head of the Division of Social and Behavioural Sciences at the School of Public Health and Family Medicine at the University of Cape Town. He has a PhD in sociocultural anthropology and an MPH in epidemiology. His research interests include HIV and masculinity; community health worker and task shifting initiatives; health diplomacy, education and activism in the context of global health; and evidence synthesis of health social-science research.
is an anthropologist and Associate Professor at the Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University. She currently conducts ethnographic research on global health futures, reproductive imaging technologies, biomedical knowledge production and expertise, governmentality, and the political economy of clinical credibility. Research has focused on Sierra Leone.
is a PhD candidate at Diakonhjemmet University College, Norway.
is Senior Lecturer at the Department of Development Studies and Director of the Centre of African Studies, SOAS, University of London. His research focuses on the role of non-state actors in development and service provision in Africa, the emergence and evolution of development narratives in and about Africa, and synergies between power, politics and development in the North and South. His publications include the book Surrogates of the State: NGOs, Development and Ujamaa in Tanzania (2008, Kumarian Press) as well as articles in African Affairs , Journal of Modern African Studies , Politique africaine , Development and Change and Social Science & Medicine among others.
is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Philosophy. Her work focuses on the practices of medical research and scientific production, focusing on the built environment, material artefacts and practical labours of experimentation in sub-Saharan Africa. She has published in Science as Culture , Journal of Cultural Economy , Medical Anthropology Quarterly , American Ethnologist and the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute , among others, and has co-edited with J. Mair & C. High, The Anthropology of Ignorance (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) and with P. Wenzel Geissler, The Value of Transnational Medical Research (Routledge, 2012).
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