4.4 Article

Competing interests, clashing ideas and institutionalizing influence: insights into the political economy of malaria control from seven African countries

Journal

HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 35-44

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czaa166

Keywords

Political economy; malaria control; health policy; ideas; interests; institutions

Funding

  1. LINK programme - UK aid from the Department for International Development (DFID)
  2. Wellcome Trust [103602, 212176]

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The article shows that political and economic considerations play a significant role in shaping malaria control efforts in sub-Saharan Africa. Global actors' hegemonic ideas and interests, as well as institutional arrangements, can influence national actors' responses to malaria control.
This article explores how malaria control in sub-Saharan Africa is shaped in important ways by political and economic considerations within the contexts of aid-recipient nations and the global health community. Malaria control is often assumed to be a technically driven exercise: the remit of public health experts and epidemiologists who utilize available data to select the most effective package of activities given available resources. Yet research conducted with national and international stakeholders shows how the realities of malaria control decision-making are often more nuanced. Hegemonic ideas and interests of global actors, as well as the national and global institutional arrangements through which malaria control is funded and implemented, can all influence how national actors respond to malaria. Results from qualitative interviews in seven malariaendemic countries indicate that malaria decision-making is constrained or directed by multiple competing objectives, including a need to balance overarching global goals with local realities, as well as a need for National Malaria Control Programmes to manage and coordinate a range of non-state stakeholders who may divide up regions and tasks within countries. Finally, beyond the influence that political and economic concerns have over programmatic decisions and action, our analysis further finds that malaria control efforts have institutionalized systems, structures and processes that may have implications for local capacity development.

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