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Recent work in anthropology points to the recognition of multispecies entanglements as the grounds for a more ethical politics. In this article, we examine efforts to control mosquitoes in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, as an example of the laborious tasks of disentanglement that characterize public health interventions. The mosquito surveillance and larval elimination practices of an urban malaria control program offer an opportunity to observe how efforts to create distance between species relate to the physical and civic textures of the city. Seen in the particular context of the contemporary African metropolis, the work of public health appears less a matter of control than a commitment to constant urban maintenance and political mobilization.

Original publication

DOI

10.1111/amet.12081

Type

Journal article

Journal

Am Ethnol

Publication Date

05/2014

Volume

41

Pages

368 - 383

Keywords

Dar es Salaam, cities, malaria, multispecies ethnography, public health