Type | Working Paper |
Title | Making humans, making people: expert under valuation and neglect of family care in reproduction and development |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
Abstract | This paper is about crises of social reproduction in two African countries, - one in West Africa the other in the South. To this end some facts on economic and child development in Ghana and Botswana are highlighted. These are two countries praised internationally by economists in the recent past for their apparent development successes. They are however also among the many countries with persistent, unacceptably high levels of infant and young child under development and under nutrition. For too long such human deprivation, and its serious, long term effects, has been omitted from the agenda of economists and sustainable development experts. At the same time the problem of arrested development has too often been perceived in the past by Early Child Development experts as a challenge for mothers alone. Here we call attention to the profound transformations in family systems and family care, - in particular the often ignored disruptions in support for mother care, - which have occurred over recent decades in both countries. We note how these appear implicated in the widely truncated levels of early child development recorded. Concern is now mounting that the latter are potentially prejudicial, not only to adult human development and capabilities, but also to national economic development and its sustainability. It is argued here that ignorance or neglect of the familial transformations and consequent potential deficits in child care, in both economic and sociological analyses, are likely to hamper the successful diagnosis of the nature of the national challenges involved. They are also likely to constrain and inhibit the design, effectiveness and execution of policies and programs based upon them. As regards academia, the need is underlined to pay more than lip service to a “human economy” and for more enlightened, consilient (multi-disciplinary) analysis of the crucial transformations taking place over time in the “family/work” nexus. A more feminist, gender sensitive, economics is required and a social science, which more actively embraces the challenges of social (and biological) reproduction, as experienced by the majority of the people of the world; - an increasingly modern and post modern world, - in which the parental stresses and strains of reproductive/productive role conflicts continue to escalate, - as individuation, individualization and individualism spread apace. This paper incidentally harks back to classic anthropological studies of kinship, marriage and child care in Western and Southern Africa, and urges the application of more ethnographic insights into current transformations in parenthood and more anthropological focus upon global transformations in familial systems of care and their consequences, for infant and young child growth and development. By so doing anthropologists could help provide yet more enlightenment for public health agendas and for social policies, promoting both Early Child Development and sustainable economic development. The post script highlights a welcome emerging turn in global, international development discourse on nutrition, towards recognition of the key part played by family care provision in Early Child Development, underlining the urgent need for further comparative study of such vital processes in domestic groups around the world, and how they are being transformed, and with what outcomes. |
» | Ghana - Demographic and Health Survey 2008 |