Mobilized, recruited, conscripted? Leveraging community health work, citizenship and public authority in northern Kenya

Grant number: 222199/Z/20/Z

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Key facts

  • Disease

    COVID-19
  • Start & end year

    2021
    2026
  • Known Financial Commitments (USD)

    $355,053.43
  • Funder

    Wellcome Trust
  • Principal Investigator

    Dr. Kathy Dodworth
  • Research Location

    United Kingdom, Kenya
  • Lead Research Institution

    University of Edinburgh
  • Research Priority Alignment

    N/A
  • Research Category

    Secondary impacts of disease, response & control measures

  • Research Subcategory

    Economic impacts

  • Special Interest Tags

    Gender

  • Study Type

    Non-Clinical

  • Clinical Trial Details

    N/A

  • Broad Policy Alignment

    Pending

  • Age Group

    Adults (18 and older)

  • Vulnerable Population

    Unspecified

  • Occupations of Interest

    Health Personnel

Abstract

Who delivers health care, where and why? The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored stark global inequalities in answers to these questions. 'Community participation', an enduring pillar of interventions in the Global South, has been leveraged in response to COVID in Africa via Community Health Workers (CHWs). Key agencies who recruit Africa's army of Community Health Workers (CHWs) have declared them to be COVID's emerging 'first line of defence'. This research will examine the structural factors that lead to the recruitment of CHWs and which contribute to the persistent undervaluing of CHWs' work in Kenya. The research will innovate in its combination of discourse analysis, informed by critical/feminist/postcolonial thought, with detailed ethnographic fieldwork in Kenya's marginalized north. The research will firstly provide a critical reading of the 'imperial remains' within CHW recruitment practices on the part of health agencies and INGOs. The research will secondly provide a historicized reading of (gendered) narratives regarding citizenship, public service and voluntarism in postcolonial Kenya. This research will then be brought into dialogue with detailed interviews with and ethnography of/by CHWs in Isiolo, northern Kenya, with implications for CHW policy but also for rethinking the desirability and justness of one of global health's core assumptions.

Publicationslinked via Europe PMC

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Fever pitch: Coloniality and contention within community health's yellow fever response in Kenya.