Abstract
Abstract
This paper compares community responses to Ebola and Covid-19 in two regions of southern and eastern Sierra Leone with reference to the theory of institutional dynamics proposed by the anthropologist Mary Douglas. Institutions, Douglas argued, are conveyed by styles of thought, shaped by the ways human communities, through everyday practices, reinforce systems of classification and denotation. Pandemic advice to ‘follow the science’ proved problematic, since there is no single institution of science, and institutions never stand alone but are bundled with other institutions, reflecting the manifold and intertwined practices of human social life. The paper explores some of the ways a traumatic epidemic of Ebola Virus Disease in Sierra Leone shaped a distinctive local response to this deadly infectious disease in the absence of an effective vaccine. This local approach emphasised social rules based on ideas about sequestration and testing. Communities then proposed to continue this rules-based approach to the pandemic of Covid-19 and showed little initial enthusiasm for vaccination. With Ebola, the adoption of rules resulted in dramatic drops in infection rates. But Covid-19 spreads in different ways, and good results from the application of social rules were much less apparent. The paper shows how communities began to grapple with this new situation. In some cases, vaccine hesitation was overcome by treating the requirement for vaccination as a new form of social discipline. More generally, it is concluded that epidemiologists need to pay specific attention to institutions and institutional dynamics in order to better understand and anticipate public reactions to new disease threats.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference26 articles.
1. Welfare work in a secret society;Margai;African Affairs,1948
2. Physical activity and risk of infection, severity and mortality of COVID-19: a systematic review and non-linear dose–response meta-analysis of data from 1 853 610 adults;Ezzatvar;British Journal of Sports Medicine,2022
3. Mokuwa, EY (2020) Epidemics and community conflicts: the value of indigenous institutions in addressing development shocks in rural Sierra Leone. PhD Thesis, Wageningen University and Research. https://www.proquest.com/openview/c53b46c3f75c92bdc3edd218ad0b7f8c/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=2026366&diss=y.
4. Rural populations exposed to Ebola Virus Disease respond positively to localised case handling: Evidence from Sierra Leone);Mokuwa;PLoS Neglected Tropical Disease,,2020