Veronica Kimani
CRC-TRR 228 Future Rural Africa: Future-making and social-ecological transformation
Email: vero.itimugmail.com
Title of PhD Project: Creating Health Futures: Maternal Health Policy, Planning, and the Making of Postcolonial Tanzania, 1961–1980
Supervision: Prof. Dr. Ulrike Lindner
Short Bio
Veronica Kimani is a doctoral candidate in modern and contemporary history at the University of Cologne in Sub-Project C07 “Creating Health futures”, which is part of the DFG-funded the CRC/TRR 228 “Future Rural Africa: Future making and Socio-ecological Transformations”. The Principal Investigator is Prof. Dr Ulrike Lindner.
She holds a Master of Arts (History) from Kenyatta University, Nairobi. Veronica started her PhD in April 2022 at the History Institute at the University of Cologne.
Her main research interests concern how Tanzania imagined its heath future after independence. It shows how the country navigated health challenges immediately after independence, including colonial legacies and the shift to Ujamaa politics in its quest for self-reliance. The thesis also shows that self-reliance did not mean isolation; instead, Tanzania maintained vibrant relationships with donors from both the West and the East during the Cold War period. Using political economy, travelling ideas and the post-colonial concept of hybridity as theoretical underpinnings and using maternal health and the as a microcosm of the National health policy plans and implementation in the Kilombero Valley, the thesis analyses how future making of the health sector in Tanzania was never a neutral process, instead it was a concerted effort of the government, the people and transnational actors.
Thesis Abstract
Title of PhD Project:
Creating Health Futures: Maternal Health Policy, Planning, and the Making of Postcolonial Tanzania, 1961–1980
This study examines health policy planning in Tanzania from 1961 to 1980 with a focus on maternal health. The period from 1961 to 1980 marked Tanzania’s transition from colonial rule to self-governance. Future-making and planning dominated the making of the newly independent state of Tanzania under the leadership of President Julius Kambarage Nyerere and his party, the Tanzania African National Union (TANU). After independence, Nyerere underscored the urgent need to combat ignorance, poverty, and disease. According to Nyerere, these three enemies were detrimental not just to the health of the people but also had a direct impact on Tanzania’s national development and its future. Yet, the legacy of colonialism continued to shape the health sector, where welfare and medical services had historically been marginal to colonial agendas and often delegated to Christian missionaries. The rural areas were conspicuously neglected in the national health plans and provisions. The new post-independent government faced the dual challenge of inheriting an underdeveloped colonial health infrastructure while seeking to fulfil the nationalist aspirations of equitable service provision. Focusing on maternal health, this study examines how the Tanzanian state envisioned, planned, and implemented health policies during the first two decades of independence. It explores the impact of Ujamaa and broader socio-economic strategies on healthcare delivery, as well as the roles of TANU members, experts, and missionaries. The study also focuses on the instrumental role of transnational actors, specifically Switzerland and China, in health policy planning in Tanzania. The analysis is grounded in three theoretical frameworks: the travelling theory, which highlights the transnational movement and adaptation of ideas, in this case, concepts of health; political economy, which foregrounds the state’s role in structuring health systems; and postcolonial theory of hybridity, which critiques the imposition of external models without adequate integration of local knowledge and practices. Methodologically, the study draws on archival research, oral histories, and secondary sources. The collected data enabled the investigation of how national-level policies, primarily formulated in urban areas, were reflected in and implemented at the local level in the rural Kilombero Valley. Ultimately, the study revealed how health policy planning in postcolonial Tanzania followed colonial patterns. The challenges faced by health workers and facilities necessitated the mobilisation of resources to build health structures through Ujamaa, as well as assistance from international cooperation. The study also shows the struggle of women in navigating maternal health concepts and national policies, as shown in aspects such as maternity leave and family planning. Despite the notable efforts that Tanzania demonstrated in improving health, this study shows how health plans often failed, worsened by problematic infrastructure, and an ambivalent rural-urban divide that influenced the health system, even during periods of relative economic success and gradual service expansion in the 1960s and early 1970s, and the ultimate decline in the 1980s.
