Jenny Trinitapoli - University of Chicago

Ten years in Balaka, Malawi: An excerpt from in-progress book manuscript, An Epidemic of Uncertainty

    Date:  10/13/2022 (Thu)

    Time:  3:30pm- 5:00pm

    Location:  Seminar will be held on-site: Gross Hall 270

    Organizer:  Chris Wildeman


Meeting Schedule: Login or email the organizer to schedule a meeting.

    All meetings will be in 230P unless otherwise noted.

    - Thursday, October 13th

    2:00pm - Lindsay Xu

    2:30pm - Tyson Brown

    3:00pm - Seminar Prep

    3:30pm - Seminar Presentation (3:30pm to 5:00pm)

    - Friday, October 14th

   10:00am - Anna Rybinska

   10:30am - OPEN

   11:00am - OPEN

   11:30am - OPEN


    Additional Comments:  Ten Years in Balaka outlines the main contours of population change in Balaka, Malawi between 2009-2019. This includes rapid population growth, urbanisation, the introduction and proliferation of mobile phones, educational expansion, the arrival of new technologies for treating HIV and a series of three distinct policies for rationing treatment in an environment of high-demand and limited resources. This is a decade of significant social transformation and uncertainty is a predictable accompaniment of change. Dr Jenny Trinitapoli will introduce the Tsogolo La Thanzi (TLT) study, describing its origins, design, procedures, epistemological underpinnings and limitations. She will describe the challenges of longitudinal studies, including the perennial problem of disentangling age and time and distinguishing compositional change from substantive change. Contrasting the view of professional demographers with ways ordinary people talk about demographic phenomena, Dr Trinitapoli will introduce the notion of population chatter and provide examples of how demographic phenomena are narrated and debated in everyday conversation. Using the TLT survey data, she will show how the HIV prevalence among women triples over the study period. The study shows how HIV is far from over and uncertainty about HIV looms large both in everyday conversation and in the survey data.