Summary information

Study title

Social History of Alcohol in East Africa, 1850-1998

Creator

Willis, J., University of Cambridge, Centre of African Studies

Study number / PID

4169 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-4169-1 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

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...
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/05/1997 - 01/12/1998

Country

Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda

Time dimension

Cross-sectional (one-time) study

Analysis unit

Individuals
Families/households
Cross-national
Subnational

Universe

Adults in the sub-locations Lenkisem and Sajiloni, Kajiado District, in Kenya; Ilenge village, Rungwe District and Ikolo village, Kyela District in Tanzania; and Kitoba amd Mpaija villages, Hoima District in Uganda.

Sampling procedure

Simple random sample: The survey was conducted in two selected localities in each field area. In each case a random selection of roughly ten percent of households was made. All individuals aged over 16 living in the household were included in the survey. In Kajiado district, the survey was conducted in the sub-location at Lenkisem, and at Sajiloni sub-location near Kajiado town. At Sajiloni, ten households were surveyed, containing thirty individuals; at Lenkisem five of the agglomerated settlements called enkang were surveyed. These contained twenty-two distinct households. In Rungwe/Kyela Districts, 25 households were surveyed: ten in Ilenge village (Rungwe) and fifteen in Ikolo village (Kyela). In Hoima, the survey was conducted in the villages of Kitoba and Mpaija, ten households being chosen from each.
Purposive selection/case studies: Informants for the interviews were selected on the basis of local advice. An attempt was made at selectivity in terms of gender and physical distribution.

Kind of data

Text
Numeric
Still image

Data collection mode

Face-to-face interview

Funding information

Grant number

R000237019

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2001

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available to UK Data Service registered users subject to the End User Licence Agreement.

Related publications

  • Willis, J. (1999) 'Enkurma Sikitoi:: Commoditization, Drink, and Power among the Maasai', The International Journal of African Historical Studies, 339-357
  • Willis, J. (2002) Potent brews:: a social history of alcohol in East Africa 1850-1999, Oxford: The British Institute in Eastern Africa in association with James Currey.ISBN 0852554710 | 9780852554715