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Struggling for Health in the City

An anthropological inquiry of health, vulnerability and resilience in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

by Brigit Obrist van Eeuwijk (Author)
©2006 Monographs 360 Pages

Summary

For international experts health is a comprehensive concept closely linked to bodily, material, spiritual and social well-being. But what does health mean to women living in a poor neighborhood of an African city? Women in Dar es Salaam see health as primarily related to livelihood, hygiene and care. To stay healthy one has to fulfill basic needs for food, water and shelter, to keep the body and home clean and to take good care of the family. Since the state and newly privatized services hardly reach them and husbands often fail in their role as breadwinners, women bear a growing burden in daily health practice. They become increasingly vulnerable, unless they manage to create a new balance by improving their knowledge, becoming economically more independent and raising support within the household, in social networks and organizations.
By shifting the focus from illness to local meanings of health and vulnerability, anthropology can make a unique contribution to the rapidly expanding field of urban health research. Such an actor-centered approach provides fascinating insights and fosters innovative theoretical debates for both scholars and practitioners. With regard to medical anthropology, this study opens new lines of inquiry which may eventually lead to an anthropology of health.

Details

Pages
360
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039106738
Language
English
Keywords
Daressalam Gesundheit Widerstandsfähigkeit Medical Anthropology Urban Anthropology Tanzania Vulnerabilität Verwundbarkeit Lebensbedingungen Frau
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2006. 360 pp., num. ill. and fig.

Biographical notes

Brigit Obrist van Eeuwijk (Author)

The Author: Brigit Obrist is a Senior Lecturer in anthropology at the University of Basel, Switzerland, and holds joint positions at the Institute of Social Anthropology and the Swiss Tropical Institute. She conducted field research in Papua New Guinea, Switzerland, Indonesia and Tanzania and currently directs various projects on risk, vulnerability and health within the Swiss National Centre of Competence in Research (NCCR) North-South: Research Partnerships for Mitigating Syndromes of Global Change.

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Title: Struggling for Health in the City