Social History of Alcohol in East Africa, 1850-1998

DOI

Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.

The main aims of this project were: To re-examine the historical patterns of change in the making and drinking of alcohol in East Africa, and to use this history of change as a tool for studying wider debates concerning control of resources within the household, and for exploring ideas of what constitutes proper 'moral' behaviour. To improve the current understanding of economic change in East Africa, with particular regard to conflicts over resources, along lines of gender and age. To explore changing notions of obligation and morality, and of the family. To produce new data on current patterns of domestic alcohol production and consumption in East Africa. The study was undertaken within the context that newspapers, officials and religious leaders in East Africa often talked of how the consumption of alcohol had increased, and changed in the last 150 years. They described a past of 'integrated' alcohol consumption in which liquor was given and consumed in limited, culturally-defined settings and in which drinking was not problematic. They compared this with a present which they characterised as one of widespread excess and moral breakdown, in which alcohol had become a commodity and social relationships had been fractured. This image of change has been taken up by several academic writers. This 'crisis' model has developed alongside a quite different school of academic literature on alcohol in Africa as a whole, which has been largely the work of historians and which has, for the colonial period in particular, been built around a simple control-resistance model which celebrates the sale of locally-made alcohol as a field for economic and social challenges to state and capital.

Main Topics:

This project involved detailed field studies in three East African countries and employed both quantitative and qualitative methods. The data obtained can be divided as follows: The results of a small-scale quantitative survey concerning the making and drinking of alcohol. Transcripts of in-depth tape-recorded vernacular interviews, translated into English. A field journal kept during the research period, giving details of the circumstances of the interviews, as well as general background information. A set of photographs taken during the fieldwork. Please note: this study does not include information on named individuals and would therefore not be useful for personal family history research.

Simple random sample: The survey was conducted in two selected localities in each field area. In e

Face-to-face interview

Identifier
DOI http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-4169-1
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=3a6f81d9fdd270bf68c56d288bbbb84cac9ab8483a79404df8894b5059e31d92
Provenance
Creator Willis, J., University of Cambridge, Centre of African Studies
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2001
Funding Reference British Institute in Eastern Africa; Economic and Social Research Council
Rights Copyright University of Cambridge, University of Durham and J. Willis; <p>The Data Collection is available to UK Data Service registered users subject to the <a href="https://ukdataservice.ac.uk/app/uploads/cd137-enduserlicence.pdf" target="_blank">End User Licence Agreement</a>.</p>
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Text; Numeric; Still image
Discipline Fine Arts, Music, Theatre and Media Studies; History; Humanities; Photography
Spatial Coverage Hoima; Kajiado; Kyela; Rungwe; Kenya; Tanzania; Uganda