Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Dissertation |
Title | Beyond the façade. Instrumentalisation of the Zambian health sector |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2012 |
URL | https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/18587/ASC-39-proefschrift[1].pdf?sequence=22 |
Abstract | As I started working at the Africa Department of the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs,1 Dutch public debate on Africa was dominated by a book written by a colleague Roel van der Veen: What went wrong with Africa. 2 This book followed Africa works, by Chabal & Daloz,3 as a critical analysis of the problems of Africa, which clashed with politically correct approaches to representing Africa’s problems. For me these books made uncomfortable reading, initially because the key messages of these books challenged my youthful idealism. But more importantly, because I realised these books presented cynical and exaggerated views of the complexities of African reality, which did not fully correspond with the Africa I thought I knew from earlier visits and field work in Tanzania, Togo, Ghana, Kenya and Zambia. This spurned me to undertake this research project, the result of which is now before you. In the introduction to the doctoral dissertation which Van der Veen wrote to complement his book, he paints a picture of a formerly elegant African colonial building, crumbling as a consequence of poor maintenance. What remains is a mere façade, a skeletal remnant of its former glory. The building has since been appropriated for new functions. Rooms are occupied by entire families. Extensions have been added, constructed from crude materials. The veranda is used as a market stall. Trees are growing through the roof. In short, the building is undergoing a process of Africanisation until eventually even the façade will crumble away. |
» | Zambia - Labour Force Survey 2005 |