HIV and the moral economy of survival in an East African City

Med Anthropol Q. 2012 Dec;26(4):534-56. doi: 10.1111/maq.12006.

Abstract

Based on fieldwork in the city of Kisumu, Kenya, the article examines the survival of HIV-positive people on antiretroviral (ARV) medicines and situates this within broader moral economies of their lives-in matters of food, hunger, social relationships, and networks of care, including NGOs. Through locating survival at the level of individual adherence to medication, ARV programs medicalize it. Yet their focus on the intimate relation between medicine and food also opens up spaces in which the material conditions of life can be articulated. The article follows these spaces, from the clinic to the economy of NGO interventions and community-based groups, paying attention to how hunger and material needs are visible in some spaces and invisible in others, and to how people have learned to articulate their "needs." In this economy, HIV identities accrue moral and economic value, as through them people become visible to the flow of funds and the distribution of goods organized by NGOs.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anthropology, Medical
  • Anti-Retroviral Agents / therapeutic use
  • Biomedical Technology
  • Food / economics*
  • Food Assistance
  • HIV Infections / drug therapy
  • HIV Infections / economics*
  • HIV Infections / psychology
  • HIV Infections / therapy*
  • Humans
  • Hunger
  • Kenya
  • Morals
  • Organizations*
  • Politics
  • Self Care
  • Self-Help Groups

Substances

  • Anti-Retroviral Agents