4.2 Article

'Ebola is a business': an analysis of the atmosphere of mistrust in the tenth Ebola epidemic in the DRC

Journal

CRITICAL PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages 297-307

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09581596.2022.2128990

Keywords

Ebola epidemics; mistrust; atmospheres; Democratic Republic of the Congo

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This paper examines the atmosphere of mistrust in the response to the Ebola epidemic in Eastern DRC, focusing on the concept of 'Ebola is a business' as a popular notion and analyzing its impact on mistrust. The analysis highlights the power of atmospheres in governing situations and disrupting structures of discrimination. The paper aims to contribute to a better understanding of collaboration barriers and effective epidemic responses.
This paper examines the atmosphere of mistrust that permeated the response to the tenth Ebola epidemic in Eastern DRC (2018-2020). The concept of an 'atmosphere of mistrust' that we develop in this article directs attention to the elusive-yet-pervasive presence of mistrust in interactions between responders and communities during the Ebola epidemic. This analysis focuses on the popular notion that 'Ebola is a business'. Our interviewees frequently used this saying during our research on the Ebola response to explain why mistrust had emerged, how it materialized, and against whom it was directed. Based on these interviews, we examine 'Ebola is a business' as a slogan that enabled people to voice mistrust. This slogan, as we aim to show, resonated with a wider atmosphere of mistrust that governed the emergency situation in Eastern DRC. In using it, people responded to their perceptions of mistrust whilst simultaneously perpetuating and extending this atmosphere of mistrust. Our analysis of the atmosphere of mistrust highlights the power of atmospheres in governing situations, mobilizing people, and disrupting structures of discrimination. It aims to contribute to a better understanding of the barriers inhibiting the collaborations between affected communities and responders, which are required to deliver effective epidemic responses. Moreover, we argue that voice and the atmosphere are important analytics for exploring the histories of mistrust that Ebola epidemics ask for.

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