Journal Article

Epidemics and the Military: Responding to COVID-19 in Uganda

Published on 29 October 2022

The UN Security Council’s response to Ebola in 2014 legitimised militarised responses. It also influenced re-sponses to COVID-19 in some African countries. Yet, little is known about the day-to-day impacts for ordinary citizens of mobilising armies for epidemic control.

Drawing on 18 months ethnographic research, this article analyses militarised responses to COVID-19 during, and following, two lockdowns at contrasting sites in Uganda: a small town in Pakwach district and a village in Kasese district. Both field sites lie close to the border of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Although the practice of health security varied between sites, the militarised response had more impact than the disease in these two places. The armed forces scaled back movement from urban conurbations to rural and peri-urban areas; while simultaneously enabling locally based official public authorities to use the proclaimed priorities of President Museveni’s government to enhance their position and power. This led to a situation whereby inhabitants created new modes of mutuality to resist or subvert the regulations being enforced, including the establishment of new forms of cross-border movement.

These findings problematise the widely held view that Uganda’s response to COVID-19 was successful. Overall, it is argued that the on-going securitisation of global health has helped to create the political space to militarise the response. While this has had unknown effects on the prevalence of COVID-19, it has entrenched unaccountable modes of public authority and created a heightened sense of insecurity on the ground.

The tendency to condone the violent practice of militarised public health programmes by international and national actors reflects a broader shift in the acceptance of more authoritarian forms of governance.

Cite this publication

Parker, M.; Baluku, M.; Ozunga, B.E. Et al (2022) 'Epidemics and the Military: Responding to COVID-19 in Uganda', Social Science & Medicine Journal, Volume 314, 2022, DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115482

Authors

Melissa Parker

Professor of Medical Anthropology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Grace Akello

Associate Professor in Medical Anthropology, Gulu University

Hayley MacGregor

Research Fellow

Melissa Leach

Emeritus Fellow

Bono E. Ozunga

Bob Okello

Peter Kermundu

Tim Allen

Publication details

published by
Elsevier
doi
10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115482
language
English

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About this publication

Region
Uganda

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