Project Details
The Fight against Counterfeit Medication: An Anthropology of Transnational Crime Control in Africa
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Julia Hornberger
Subject Area
Social and Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology
Term
from 2013 to 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 240306178
This study looks at the development of the global campaign against counterfeit medication, with a special focus on South Africa. The aim is to explore the technologies being brought to bear in combating the production, trade and consumption of fake and spurious medication, and to understand how these technologies - through processes of translation and adaptation - are shaping and being shaped by the interface between health, law and commerce. National and international policy advocates who advance an anti-counterfeit medication agenda and demand increasing crime control efforts assume compatibility and a congruence of interests across concerns about health, crime and commerce, under the banner of a looming public health crisis. This study shows, however, that these three issues are far from being congruent and that each of them (in interaction with the other two) produces its own ways of telling good medicine from bad medicine. This results in a range of competing and intersecting techniques for regulating the circulation of medication and the re-ordering of society in the name of drug security. The study is part of a larger comparative project which, under the title of The Anthropology of Transnational Crime Control in Africa, looks at the translation of technologies across a range of different crime control regimes which all have emerged as a response to the increased global mobility of ideas, goods and bodies.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
South Africa