Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Kampala, Uganda.
School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom.
J Biosoc Sci. 2023 Nov;55(6):995-1014. doi: 10.1017/S0021932023000019. Epub 2023 Feb 10.
The 'livestock revolution' has seen the lives and livelihoods of peri-urban peoples increasingly intertwine with pigs and poultry across Africa in response to a rising demand for meat protein. This 'revolution' heralds the potential to address both poverty and nutritional needs. However, the intensification of farming has sparked concern, including for antibiotic misuse and its consequences for antimicrobial resistance (AMR). These changes reflect a micro-biopolitical conundrum where the agendas of microbes, farmers, publics, authorities and transnational agencies are in tension. To understand this requires close attention to the practices, principles and potentials held between these actors. Ethnographic research took place in a peri-urban district, Wakiso, in Uganda between May 2018 and March 2021. This included a medicine survey at 115 small- and medium-scale pig and poultry farms, 18 weeks of participant observation at six farms, 34 in-depth interviews with farmers and others in the local livestock sector, four group discussions with 38 farmers and 7 veterinary officers, and analysis of archival, media and policy documents. Wide-scale adoption of was found, an entrepreneurial phenomenon that sees Ugandans raising 'exotic' livestock with imported methods and measures for production, including antibiotics for immediate therapy, prevention of infections and to promote production and protection of livelihoods. This assemblage - a promissory assemblage of the peri-urban - reinforced precarity against which antibiotics formed a potential layer of protection. The paper argues that to address antibiotic use as a driver of AMR is to address precarity as a driver of antibiotic use. Reduced reliance on antibiotics required a level of biosecurity and economies of scale in purchasing insurance that appeared affordable only by larger-scale commercial producers. This study illustrates the risks - to finances, development and health - of expanding an entrepreneurial model of protein production in populations vulnerable to climate, infection and market dynamics.
“畜牧业革命”见证了城市周边人民的生活和生计日益与非洲各地的猪和家禽交织在一起,以满足对肉类蛋白质不断增长的需求。这场“革命”有可能同时解决贫困和营养需求问题。然而,农业集约化引发了人们的担忧,包括对抗生素的滥用及其对抗微生物耐药性(AMR)的影响。这些变化反映了一个微观生物政治困境,其中微生物、农民、公众、当局和跨国机构的议程存在紧张关系。要理解这一点,需要密切关注这些行为体之间的实践、原则和潜力。民族志研究于 2018 年 5 月至 2021 年 3 月在乌干达的瓦基索(Wakiso)城市周边地区进行。这包括对 115 个中小规模的猪和家禽养殖场进行的一次药物调查,在六个农场进行了 18 周的参与式观察,对当地畜牧业的 34 名农民和其他人员进行了 34 次深入访谈,与 38 名农民和 7 名兽医进行了 4 次小组讨论,并对档案、媒体和政策文件进行了分析。发现广泛采用了,这是一种创业现象,乌干达人用进口的方法和措施来饲养“外来”牲畜,包括用于即时治疗、预防感染以及促进生产和保护生计的抗生素。这种组合——城市周边地区的一种有希望的组合——强化了对抗生素形成潜在保护的脆弱性。本文认为,解决抗生素作为 AMR 驱动因素的问题,就是要解决作为抗生素使用驱动因素的脆弱性问题。减少对抗生素的依赖需要在购买保险方面实现一定程度的生物安全和规模经济,而这种保险似乎只有规模较大的商业生产者才能负担得起。本研究说明了在容易受到气候、感染和市场动态影响的人群中扩大蛋白质生产的创业模式所带来的财务、发展和健康风险。