Militarism and the Politics of Covid-19 Response in Uganda

Moses Khisa, S. Rwengabo
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Abstract

Within the broader context of securitized responses to Covid-19 globally, Uganda experienced an oversized military role, ranging from law-and-order and lockdown enforcement, to managing food-relief supplies, medical operations, and partisan political repression. What explains this excessive militarization? To address this poser, the article draws on secondary sources and key-informant interviews to test the hypothesis that military involvement in pandemic responses depends on pre-pandemic militarism. The findings reveal direct links between pre-crisis militarism and Covid-19 responses, contrary to the view that exceptionality and novelty of Covid-19 informed overly militarized responses. Through pandemic framing and institutional morphing, pre-pandemic militarism foregrounded military roles because Covid-19 provided Uganda’s ruling elites with a public health pretext to heighten militaristic rule, clutch the political arena in the context of elections, and deepen military presence in civilian public health realms. This excessive militarization of public health seriously impacts civil–military relations, specifically command and control, reporting and accountability, and resources management.
军国主义与乌干达应对新冠肺炎的政治
在全球对Covid-19采取证券化应对措施的更大背景下,乌干达经历了巨大的军事作用,从维持法律秩序和封锁执法,到管理粮食救济供应、医疗行动和党派政治镇压。如何解释这种过度军事化?为了解决这一问题,本文利用二手资料和关键信息提供者访谈来检验军事参与流行病应对取决于流行病前军国主义的假设。研究结果揭示了危机前的军国主义与应对Covid-19之间的直接联系,这与认为Covid-19的特殊性和新颖性导致过度军事化应对的观点相反。通过大流行框架和制度演变,大流行前的军国主义突出了军事角色,因为Covid-19为乌干达的统治精英提供了一个公共卫生借口,以加强军国主义统治,在选举背景下掌握政治舞台,并深化军事存在于民用公共卫生领域。这种公共卫生的过度军事化严重影响了军民关系,特别是指挥和控制、报告和问责制以及资源管理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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