This blog is prompted by the tragic death of my valued
colleague and collaborator at the Centre for Social Research of the University of Malawi – James Milner. On 2nd September 2014
James was involved in a road accident while conducting fieldwork in the north
of Malawi. He was hospitalised and later died in Mwaiwathu Private Hospital,
Blantyre on 7th September 2014. The James I knew and miss was committed to his
work, his family and his church.
James’s sudden death is a huge shock and loss to his family,
friends and colleagues around the world. He worked as an economist for the
Government of Malawi for five years and 19 years as a research fellow at the
Centre for Social Research, University of Malawi. He studied as a postgraduate
at Williams College in the USA and York University in the UK.
I worked with James on an ESRC-DFID funded project
investigating young people’s use of mobile phones in Africa (available here).
He joined the project team in 2012 and quickly became a valued colleague for
his dedication, loyalty, dependability and thoroughness. We last undertook
fieldwork together in January earlier this year when we spent several weeks
running a large questionnaire survey with a team of research assistants. It was
demanding work involving long days in remote communities, rough roads, heat,
occasional malaria and even reluctant respondents at times. Our evenings were
spent closely quality checking piles of completed questionnaires and closely
monitoring research assistants’ performance. James’ contribution was vital to
ensuring everything went smoothly.
During fieldwork we usually travelled as a team together
with a driver and several research assistants in a Toyota Landcruiser and as I
always do I regularly reminded everyone to wear a seat belt and encouraged
those reluctant to use the seatbelts because they were dusty, difficult to
adjust and uncomfortable that it is better to ‘Arrive Alive’. I am a passionate
believer in the virtue of seatbelts having been personally in two vehicle accidents
(overturned minibus on US fieldtrip; collision in Germany) where seatbelts
saved lives and because I might have been orphaned as a child had my mother not
been wearing a seatbelt in an accident at high speed on a UK dual carriageway.
It is painful for me to know that last month James was not wearing a seatbelt
and was flung from the vehicle sustaining injuries, while the front passenger (a
visiting researcher from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) and
the University of Malawi driver who were wearing seatbelts escaped relatively
unscathed.
I took this photo in July 2013 during the qualitative
fieldwork phase of the mobile phone project. James (wearing glasses, 3rd
from left) is standing together with our hardworking team of research
assistants during a break from transcription of interviews at the College of
Medicine Guesthouse in Blantyre, Malawi.
While mourning the loss of a colleague James’ untimely death
prompts wider reflections on the unevenness of the playing field between
academics in/of the Global North and those in/of the Global South. It is a
stark reality that life expectancy in the Global North (UK average life
expectancy is over 80 years) far exceeds life expectancy in the Global South (like
expectancy for Malawi is about 55 years). This bare demographic fact has major
implications for trying to build and sustain long term North-South academic
research collaborations.
It is more than poignant that on the weekend of his death
James was expected to be travelling to the UK to present at a DFID-ESRC event
in London with a collaborator from Durham University. Sadly, during the past three decades of my career James is
not the first academic collaborator I have worked with in Africa who has died
before old age. An academic geographer at University of Malawi, as well as two
team members (one a young researcher) in Ghana at University of Cape Coast all
died during or shortly after we worked together on collaborative international
research projects. None of these died in road accidents I believe but HIV/AIDS
is one of the top causes of adult deaths for both Malawi and Ghana along with
stroke and heart disease which also kill plenty of people in UK too. I can
recall only one colleague in UK I might have collaborated with if he hadn’t
died of cancer in his 50s. Other UK colleagues continue to be academically
active into their 70s and 80s.
Where the death toll from road accidents in Africa are
concerned expatriates are also not immune. I knew two British geographers and
long term Africa residents who died tragically in car accidents in Kenya and
South Africa. Their contributions to research and teaching which might
otherwise have been expected to continue for several decades longer were
curtailed.
Mortality on Africa’s roads is shockingly high - Malawi has
the 3rd highest rate of deaths from road traffic accidents in the
world (here) exacerbated by poorly maintained vehicles and dangerous driving habits.
Are my experiences of the tragic loss of colleagues typical
for researchers who work in the Global South and try to build up long term
collaborative relationships? I suspect these experiences are not unique and there
are similar challenge for those who work in Africa and other poor countries.
No comments:
Post a Comment