The convergence of American and Nigerian religious conservatism in a biopolitical shaping of Nigeria’s HIV/AIDS prevention programmes
Jlateh V. Jappah*
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, UK
(Received 5 March 2012; final version received 27 November 2012)
Nigeria has the largest number of HIV/AIDS cases inWest Africa, with 3.3 million people estimated to be living with the disease. The country remains a fragile democratic state and has allocated insufficient resources to combat the spread of HIV/AIDS among its citizens. The preponderance of President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) dollars, expert knowledge, conservative ideology and activities has shaped the direction of HIV/AIDS sexual-transmission prevention programmes in Nigeria. PEPFAR channels significant resources through Nigerian faith-based organisations (FBOs), and considers these organisations integral for HIV prevention strategies. In many instances, HIV/AIDS prevention programmes managed by FBOs reflect their ideologies of morality and sexuality. There is a convergence of religious ideology concerning morality and HIV infectivity between American and Nigerian conservatives; this produces a fertile ground for the influence and expansion of the conservative activities of PEPFAR in Nigeria. The paper highlights this nexus and draws attention to the biopolitical underpinning of PEPFAR in shaping Nigeria’s HIV prevention programmes. The paper further notes both positive and negative effects of PEPFAR activities and attempts by the Obama administration to redirect PEPFAR to a more holistic approach in order to optimise outcomes.
Keywords: Nigeria; religious conservatism; PEPFAR; HIV/AIDS; biopolitics
Introduction
Within the past two decades, African states have been transitioning from autocratic
rule to more representative forms of governance. Bassett and Straus (2011) note that
in 1989, only five states in sub-Saharan Africa had democratic multiparty political
systems. Conversely, they note that by the late 1990s, the trend had changed with
only four countries in the region that had not transitioned to holding multiparty
presidential or parliamentary elections. However, Bassett and Straus attest that the
rise of democratic governance in sub-Saharan Africa has not been flawless, and cite
instances of fraudulent elections and coup d’états. Yet this new trend of representa-
tion has been spreading and has spurred a new wave of civil societies and grassroots
organisations demanding rights and entitlement programmes from their governments
and the international community at large. Further, De Waal (2006) notes that
African electorates have not made HIV/AIDS a top priority despite the havoc the
disease continues to wreak. He argues that despite the conspicuous inaction or
denialism exhibited by many African leaders regarding HIV/AIDS, the disease does
*Email: [email protected]
Global Public Health, 2013
Vol. 8, No. 3, 312–325, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2013.765023
# 2013 Taylor &