Abstract
Global policy for managing antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is underpinned by a standardised and coherent global framework for reducing antibiotic use in clinical health, veterinary health, and food production sectors. Within the framework, problematic antibiotic use (a significant driver of AMR) is treated as a knowledge deficit on the part of users and prescribers, which can be remedied by educating them to make better informed treatment decisions. This narrow approach to AMR management conceals the socioeconomic and material drivers of antibiotic decision-making, creating challenges for low resource regions that rely on antibiotic therapies to manage uncertainty and precarity. Thus, there is a need for a global AMR policy that acknowledges the diversity of sociomaterial arrangements and practices that antibiotics form part of, if their use is to be reduced without undermining productivity or the attainment of poverty reduction indicators. Drawing upon research of antibiotic use in West Africa’s livestock sector, this article analyses the interrelation of antibiotics, AMR action plans, and production management strategies in ecologies of livestock breeding practices. We apply the STS-influenced perspective of noncoherence to analyse how seemingly contradictory practices and institutional logics productively coalesce. We argue that observing noncoherent practices increases our understanding of antibiotic use in relation to local breeding conditions that are frequently not of the producers’ making, whilst drawing attention to context-specific possibilities for improving livestock management capacities and reducing reliance on antibiotic therapies in low-resource settings. The article concludes by calling for an AMR global policy that is more responsive to local specificity rather than enforcing universal standardisation.
Highlights
In 2019 and 2020, we organised nine focus groups with West African veterinarians and livestock breeders to discuss their antibiotic practices and knowledge of antimicrobial resistance (AMR)
We explore the operation of noncoherences in ecologies of breeding practices, demonstrating both the challenges and the opportunities they provide for implementing antibiotic use (ABU) reduction measures
We found that local research centres and private organisations in both countries experimented with traditional local remedies to find compounds that could be applied as alternatives to antibiotics, or to the chemical disinfectants for managing farm hygiene
Summary
In 2019 and 2020, we organised nine focus groups with West African veterinarians and livestock breeders to discuss their antibiotic practices and knowledge of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Through analysis of specific empirical examples, they identified six styles of noncoherence, which they labelled modes of syncretism: denial (of the diverse, messy labour required to make a programme of action work); domestication (smoothing differences into coherence); separation (the effort of keeping that which does not cohere apart); care (tinkering, experimenting, and negotiating with that which does not cohere); conflict (over how to organise that which does not cohere); and collapse (a blending of noncohering practices to provoke a result) These styles are not mutually exclusive, but rather they coalesce in syncretic ecologies (Law et al, 2013). This provides possibilities for designing innovative and more effective management solutions that can accommodate this complex network of actors, institutions, and practices
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