Abstract
The paper makes an ethnographic contribution to the discussion of what constitutes well-being
through the exploration of a government poverty reduction programme in Moroto Town, Uganda,
and how the programme came to be perceived as strange and even damaging to the people who
benefitted from it. The programme sought to live up to standards of participation, conflict
sensitivity and sustainability, but in practice it failed to provide change in people’s lives that they
had reason to value. The paper follows a line of thought, which regards values as those actions one
is most willing to invest energy in. It illuminates how the actions that the programme generated
were actions that the beneficiaries contributed little value or no value, while it impeded the actions
that were highly valued. The programme endangered people’s safety and challenged the social
worth of the beneficiaries in the social lifeworld they valued being part of.
through the exploration of a government poverty reduction programme in Moroto Town, Uganda,
and how the programme came to be perceived as strange and even damaging to the people who
benefitted from it. The programme sought to live up to standards of participation, conflict
sensitivity and sustainability, but in practice it failed to provide change in people’s lives that they
had reason to value. The paper follows a line of thought, which regards values as those actions one
is most willing to invest energy in. It illuminates how the actions that the programme generated
were actions that the beneficiaries contributed little value or no value, while it impeded the actions
that were highly valued. The programme endangered people’s safety and challenged the social
worth of the beneficiaries in the social lifeworld they valued being part of.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
---|---|
Andet | DIIS Working Paper |
Vol/bind | 4 |
Sider (fra-til) | 2-23 |
Antal sider | 22 |
Status | Udgivet - 2015 |
Udgivet eksternt | Ja |