Diversity as valued and troubled: social identities and demographic categories in understandings of rapid urban growth in Vanuatu

Type Journal Article - Anthropology & Medicine
Title Diversity as valued and troubled: social identities and demographic categories in understandings of rapid urban growth in Vanuatu
Author(s)
Volume 20
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 142-159
URL https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23898835
Abstract
This paper deals with the simultaneous mainstreaming and diversification of ni-Vanuatu social categories associated with the ways in which population growth is understood as a possible crisis in both demographic knowledge and everyday ni-Vanuatu knowledge. The author is interested in understanding the downplaying but primarily the amplification of difference with respect to place, generation and gender identities. The relationship between reproduction, social reproduction and the multiple meanings of modernity is at issue. In the expert knowledge of demography that proffers advice for the ni-Vanuatu state, it is the lack of modern development - in the form of adequate biomedical birth control, western education, and the equality of women - that is the implicit cause of population growth. Yet, many ni-Vanuatu see population growth as tied to the troubles that arise from the dilution of traditional social forms: there is too much modernity. In both demographic and ni-Vanuatu everyday narrations of the potential population crisis, diversification and mainstreaming take place and vulnerabilities are produced.

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