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Accepted Contribution:
Contribution short abstract:
- A critical account of how development, rights, and humanitarian oriented approaches are related to the bourse familiale. - Ethnography of the moral imaginaries it is drawn into, with a focus on idioms of subsistence. - Contribution to calls to reconsider the place of charity in the 21st century.
Contribution long abstract:
The bourse familiale cash transfer was introduced in 2013 as a grand projet at the heart of the Senegalese government’s development plan. It is a conditional cash transfer, backed by the World Bank, and as in the name, was inspired by the more famous bolsa famĂlia in Brazil. Drawing on doctoral fieldwork carried out in a small informal settlement in Dakar in 2017-18, and shorter periods of fieldwork since, I examine the kind of social contract that emerges in relation to the bourse familiale. Conditionality largely falls away in the Senegalese context, frustrating World Bank development-oriented approaches. The temporary nature of the cash transfer precludes suggestions that this might move it in the direction of rights. More recently the bourse familiale is drawn into logics of assistance increasingly characterised by humanitarianism and crisis. Whether in the name of development, rights, or humanitarianism, different attempts are made to put distance between assistance in the form of cash transfers and charity.
In my contribution, I examine how such attempts are frustrated as the bourse familiale is drawn into idioms of subsistence revolving around rice and oil (ceeb ak diwilin). I argue that what might be described as a moral economy of subsistence contributes to anthropological calls to reconsider the place of charity in the twenty first century, and reflect on how this might relate to the broader objectives of social justice.
Cash transfers and the promise of social justice?
Session 1 Thursday 27 June, 2024, -