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Constructing Success: The World Bank, Onchocerciasis Control, & What Lies Beneath Global Health Triumphalist Narratives

Abstract

Using a historical case study of the World Bank and World Health Organization (WHO)’s Onchocerciasis Control Programme (OCP, 1972-2002), I explore how success is conceptualised in global health and why it matters for policy and priority-setting. First, I summarise the ‘dominant’ OCP success narrative that has emerged since the 1980s, which is based on public health, socio-economic, and humanitarian justifications for the programme’s effectiveness. Next, I analyse how socio-economic metrics linking the programme’s disease control to increased labour productivity and agricultural land availability evolved in the 1980-90s. This alternative analysis of the OCP demonstrates how metrics, particularly when divorced from their assumptions and political context, are pliable and constructible. I argue that the OCP’s success was actively constructed by the World Bank, and that moving beyond triumphalist, programme-level ‘lessons-learned’ approaches within global health requires disruption of the epistemic, institutional, and discursive power that ‘lies beneath’ success narratives.

More information

Type
Journal Article
Author
Winters J