Precarious Projects: Conversions of (Biomedical) Knowledge in an East African City

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Abstract

This article explores the orientations of lay people in Kenya to science-specifically to biomedical knowledge about HIV-and their struggles to convert this knowledge into meaningful futures. In Kenya, the global response to the HIV-AIDS epidemic has resulted in a highly stratified landscape of intervention. Globally-funded treatment programs and clinical trials, focusing on HIV, channel transnational resources, expertise, and knowledge into specific sites-HIV clinics, NGOs, and research stations-inscribing these spaces as 'global' while leaving others decidedly 'local.' Rolled out in the form of 'projects,' these interventions offer resources and opportunities for a limited time only. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in the city of Kisumu, this article follows the circulation of biomedical knowledge through such projects and its conversion in ways beyond those imagined by policy-makers, as it meets the aspirations of city-dwellers and enters into local livelihoods. Mediated by nongovernmental organizations through workshops and certificates, this knowledge is both fragmentary and ephemeral. I explore the temporal and spatial implications of such knowledge for those who seek to attach themselves to it and shape their identities and futures in relation to it. © 2014 Ruth J. Prince.

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Prince, R. J. (2014). Precarious Projects: Conversions of (Biomedical) Knowledge in an East African City. Medical Anthropology: Cross Cultural Studies in Health and Illness, 33(1), 68–83. https://doi.org/10.1080/01459740.2013.833918

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