Storeng Katerini Tagmatarchi, Akoum Mélanie Stephanie, Murray Susan F
Centre for Development and the Environment/Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Norway.
Anthropol Med. 2013 Apr;20(1):85-97. doi: 10.1080/13648470.2012.692360. Epub 2012 Aug 17.
Global advocacy campaigns increasingly highlight the negative impact of reproductive morbidity on economic productivity and development in order to justify donor investment in maternal health. Anthropological approaches nuance such narrow economic estimations of reproductive health. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork from Burkina Faso in West Africa, this paper analyses the dynamic, and sometimes contradictory, relationship between women's work and reproductive health in impoverished communities. Specifically, it examines the consequences of life-threatening 'near-miss' obstetric complications for women's work across domestic, agricultural and economic spheres over a four-year period. Such events provide a window onto the diverse ways in which production and reproduction are intimately linked within women's everyday lives. Reproduction and production entail sources of potential empowerment and enhancement, as well as potential threats, to health and well-being. In the aftermath of 'near-miss' events, the realms of reproduction and production sometimes jeopardise each other and at other times reinforce each other, while strength in one domain can compensate for weakness in the other. Women's experiences thus reveal how 'production' and 'reproduction' are mutually constituted, challenging the purely instrumental accounts of pregnancy-related 'productivity loss' that dominate current global health discourse.
全球宣传活动越来越多地强调生殖疾病对经济生产力和发展的负面影响,以此为捐助者对孕产妇健康的投资提供理由。人类学方法细化了对生殖健康这种狭隘的经济评估。本文借鉴西非布基纳法索的民族志田野调查,分析了贫困社区中妇女工作与生殖健康之间动态的、有时相互矛盾的关系。具体而言,它考察了危及生命的“险些丧命”产科并发症在四年时间里对妇女在家庭、农业和经济领域工作的影响。此类事件为观察生产与生殖在妇女日常生活中紧密相连的多种方式提供了一个窗口。生殖和生产既蕴含着增强权能和提升福祉的潜力,也存在对健康和幸福的潜在威胁。在“险些丧命”事件之后,生殖和生产领域有时相互危及,有时相互强化,而一个领域的优势可以弥补另一个领域的劣势。因此,妇女的经历揭示了“生产”和“生殖”是如何相互构成的,挑战了当前全球卫生话语中占主导地位的与怀孕相关的“生产力损失”的纯粹工具性观点。