Antibiotics and the Biopolitics of Sex Work in Zimbabwe.

Salome Manyau ORCID logo; Justin Dixon ORCID logo; Norest Mutukwa; Faith Kandiye; Paula Palanco Lopez; Eleanor E MacPherson ORCID logo; Rashida A Ferrand ORCID logo; Clare IR Chandler ORCID logo; (2022) Antibiotics and the Biopolitics of Sex Work in Zimbabwe. Medical anthropology, 41 (3). pp. 257-271. ISSN 0145-9740 DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2022.2037083
Copy

The advent of antibiotics transformed the global public health landscape, dramatically improving health outcomes. Drawing on historical and ethnographic research on sex work in Zimbabwe, we examine the role of antibiotics in the management of sexually transmitted infections among sex workers, from punitive colonial approaches to "empowerment"-based discourses. We illustrate how programs for sex workers, while valued by these women, are narrow, exclusionary, and enact a pharmaceuticalized form of governance that hangs on the efficacy of antibiotics. With antibiotics' efficacy under threat, we consider how latent colonial logics are in danger of being reactivated to control both infections and women.


picture_as_pdf
01459740.2022.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 4.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads