In this work, we took on the task of addressing the issue of the pandemic in Africa and in Angola in particular. To do this, we used bibliographic research and participant observation. In it, we begin by going through the history of the West's relations with Africa, which we characterize as perverse, in order to deal with the proposal arising from the first that the second should become a testing ground for COVID-19 and the catastrophic predictions about the pandemic in the second context. Then, we address some of the recent studies on the subject that had Africa as their object, to demonstrate that, contrary to catastrophic predictions, Africa has not been punished by COVID-19 which has manifested itself in a mild way, compared to other continents. And if, initially, African leaders treated the pandemic based on externally oriented global solutions, they gradually began to take decisions autonomously according to their own reality and based on internal resources and knowledge. We conclude by stating that one of the interim lessons that the pandemic made possible for Africa was the demonstration that there are no global solutions to local problems and that it is necessary for Africa to respond to its problems with its own resources and not with formulas that have proven effective in other contexts but which in Africa may not serve. Another temporary lesson is that the effective process of liberating Africa and Africans still depends on being able, in this context, to despise the narrative of the West when it takes them as objects, as this tends to place it and Africans in a position of less value which coincides neither with the being of Africa nor with the being of Africans.
Published in | Central African Journal of Public Health (Volume 7, Issue 6) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12 |
Page(s) | 257-260 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Pandemic, Africa, Western, Decolonial Perspective
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APA Style
Helena Cosma da Graca Fonseca Veloso. (2021). About the Catastrophic Forecasts, Coming from the West, About the Behavior of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Africa. Central African Journal of Public Health, 7(6), 257-260. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12
ACS Style
Helena Cosma da Graca Fonseca Veloso. About the Catastrophic Forecasts, Coming from the West, About the Behavior of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Africa. Cent. Afr. J. Public Health 2021, 7(6), 257-260. doi: 10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12
AMA Style
Helena Cosma da Graca Fonseca Veloso. About the Catastrophic Forecasts, Coming from the West, About the Behavior of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Africa. Cent Afr J Public Health. 2021;7(6):257-260. doi: 10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12
@article{10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12, author = {Helena Cosma da Graca Fonseca Veloso}, title = {About the Catastrophic Forecasts, Coming from the West, About the Behavior of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Africa}, journal = {Central African Journal of Public Health}, volume = {7}, number = {6}, pages = {257-260}, doi = {10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.cajph.20210706.12}, abstract = {In this work, we took on the task of addressing the issue of the pandemic in Africa and in Angola in particular. To do this, we used bibliographic research and participant observation. In it, we begin by going through the history of the West's relations with Africa, which we characterize as perverse, in order to deal with the proposal arising from the first that the second should become a testing ground for COVID-19 and the catastrophic predictions about the pandemic in the second context. Then, we address some of the recent studies on the subject that had Africa as their object, to demonstrate that, contrary to catastrophic predictions, Africa has not been punished by COVID-19 which has manifested itself in a mild way, compared to other continents. And if, initially, African leaders treated the pandemic based on externally oriented global solutions, they gradually began to take decisions autonomously according to their own reality and based on internal resources and knowledge. We conclude by stating that one of the interim lessons that the pandemic made possible for Africa was the demonstration that there are no global solutions to local problems and that it is necessary for Africa to respond to its problems with its own resources and not with formulas that have proven effective in other contexts but which in Africa may not serve. Another temporary lesson is that the effective process of liberating Africa and Africans still depends on being able, in this context, to despise the narrative of the West when it takes them as objects, as this tends to place it and Africans in a position of less value which coincides neither with the being of Africa nor with the being of Africans.}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR T1 - About the Catastrophic Forecasts, Coming from the West, About the Behavior of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Africa AU - Helena Cosma da Graca Fonseca Veloso Y1 - 2021/11/24 PY - 2021 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12 DO - 10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12 T2 - Central African Journal of Public Health JF - Central African Journal of Public Health JO - Central African Journal of Public Health SP - 257 EP - 260 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2575-5781 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cajph.20210706.12 AB - In this work, we took on the task of addressing the issue of the pandemic in Africa and in Angola in particular. To do this, we used bibliographic research and participant observation. In it, we begin by going through the history of the West's relations with Africa, which we characterize as perverse, in order to deal with the proposal arising from the first that the second should become a testing ground for COVID-19 and the catastrophic predictions about the pandemic in the second context. Then, we address some of the recent studies on the subject that had Africa as their object, to demonstrate that, contrary to catastrophic predictions, Africa has not been punished by COVID-19 which has manifested itself in a mild way, compared to other continents. And if, initially, African leaders treated the pandemic based on externally oriented global solutions, they gradually began to take decisions autonomously according to their own reality and based on internal resources and knowledge. We conclude by stating that one of the interim lessons that the pandemic made possible for Africa was the demonstration that there are no global solutions to local problems and that it is necessary for Africa to respond to its problems with its own resources and not with formulas that have proven effective in other contexts but which in Africa may not serve. Another temporary lesson is that the effective process of liberating Africa and Africans still depends on being able, in this context, to despise the narrative of the West when it takes them as objects, as this tends to place it and Africans in a position of less value which coincides neither with the being of Africa nor with the being of Africans. VL - 7 IS - 6 ER -