Posts by whrin_admin

Epilepsy-associated stigma in sub-Saharan Africa: The social landscape of a disease, 2005

Many studies in developed regions of the world have confirmed that stigma contributes substantially to the psychological and social burden of epilepsy. Relatively few studies of epilepsy-associated stigma have been conducted in Africa, where much of the world’s burden of epilepsy exists. In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), particularly in rural regions, close family ties, communal living situations, and traditional belief systems undoubtedly influence the expression of stigmatization. A review of the epidemiologic, anthropologic, and sociologic studies of epilepsy in SSA provides significant insights into how people with epilepsy (PWE) are per- ceived by their communities and families and how these perceptions translate into limited social and economic opportunities and possibly worsen the physical vulnerability of PWE in this region. The medical community is not exempt from the social process of stigmatization, and poor public health infrastructure and medical services undoubtedly contribute to the cycle of epilepsy-asso- ciated stigma through wide treatment gaps, poor seizure control, and high rates of seizure-related injury. In this review, we extrapolate data from existing studies of epilepsy in SSA coupled with our own experience providing epilepsy care in the region to give an overview of the social landscape of this common, devastating condition.

See full paper here

Witchcraft and Displacement

There is a longstanding and well-documented relationship between human displacement and witchcraft allegations. The Policy Development and Evaluation Service (PDES) has undertaken a very rapid assessment of the current state of knowledge about refugee protection and witchcraft allegations.

See full report here.

The Witch Hunt as a Structure of Argumentation

The concept of a witch hunt is frequently invoked, in recent times, to describe a kind of procedure for deciding the guilt of a person against whom an accusation has been made. But what exactly is a witch hunt? In this paper, ten conditions are formulated as a cluster of properties characterizing the witch hunt as a framework in which arguments are used: (1) pressure of social forces, (2) stigmatization, (3) climate of fear, (4) resemblance to a fair trial, (5) use of simulated evidence, (6) simulated expert testimony, (7) nonfalsifi- ability characteristic of evidence, (8) reversal of polarity, (9) non-openness, and (10) use of the loaded question technique. The witch hunt, as characterized by these criteria, is shown to function as a negative normative structure for evaluating argumentation used in particular cases.

See full paper here.

Child Abuse in the UK: Witchcraft and Possession, Oct 2013

The essay is an argument for legislative reform linking the branding of children as witches and possessed and incitement to significant harm. It will propose that the law is reformed to include the criminal offence of inciting significant harm to a child.

See full essay here.

Papua New Guinea: Death and Sanguma in Paradise

The young girl that died was 16 and was a niece of the lady she was staying with. She was sick for several days and complaining of severe neck and head pain. 

Because of her age and the way she died, it was immediately suspected that she was killed with sanguma (sorcery used for the purpose of killing). Most of the deaths in the Sepik region except for the very old seem to be attributed to sanguma. At the very least the possibility is seriously discussed. People are deathly afraid of sanguma.

Read more here

UK: “The Torso in the Thames: Imagining Darkest Africa in the UK” by Todd Sanders

In the chapter “The Torso in The Thames: Imagining Darkest Africa in The United Kingdom,” Todd Sanders described the 2001 investigation surrounding the discovery of a torso belonging to “a young black boy found floating in the River Thames” (2005:126).

Sanders began the chapter by describing the case’s development over the following two years. Through his summary, Sanders considers the consequences of the police-media engagement surrounding the investigation. More specifically, he draws the reader’s attention to four sequential consequences–the homogenization of an African image, the supposed moral bankruptcy of this artificially unified culture, their perceived Western infiltration, and finally the role anthropologists play in the public sphere.

Read more here

India: Drive against witch-hunting

In order to spread scientific knowledge on basic healthcare techniques as well as preventing witch-hunt cases in upper Assam, Mission Birubala, a voluntary trust set up for launching massive awareness against practicing of occultism and witch-hunting, has started a series of sensitization programs in some selected areas of Jorhat, Golaghat and Tinsukia districts.

In one such programme, renowned anti-witchcraft activist Birubala Rabha said here on Tuesday that she along with her associates will try their best to make the people think on scientific lines in day-to-day life instead of resorting to occult practices during any kind of disease or epidemic.

Read more here

Papua New Guinea: Papua New Guinea woman accused of witchcraft tells of villagers’ knife attack

Papua New Guinea woman Mary tells Amnesty International how she was attacked after the death of a child in her village, in PNG’s highlands region. Locals suspected witchcraft and blamed her for the death. Non-government organisations are working to end sorcery-related attacks in a country suffering an epidemic of violence.

Read more and watch a short video here

Saudi Arabia: ‘Bewitched’ maid held at airport

Saudi airport police men arrested an Asian housemaid flying back home after seizing money concealed in bread and hair inside a cucumber with the aim of practicing witchcraft, a newspaper reported on Thursday.

“Authorities said she was stole the hair from someone here with the aim of casting a magic spell after arriving home,” the paper said without mentioning where in Saudi Arabia the maid was arrested.

Read more here

USA: ‘I killed them because they are witches’: Man charged with killing girlfriend, her daughter with a hammer inside Queens home

A Queens man has been charged with bludgeoning his girlfriend and her daughter to death inside their home Wednesday morning.

Cops say 44-year-old Carlos Amarillo called 911 just after midnight saying, “Two females are dead, they were assassinated, hurry, they are dead. I killed them because they are witches, I want the police to kill me. I killed them with a hammer.”

Read more here

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