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The Nexus between Traditional Healing and Societal Organisation: Reflections on Busoga Society Socio–Cultural, Economic and Political Organisation

The Nexus between Traditional Healing and Societal Organisation: Reflections on Busoga Society Socio–Cultural, Economic and Political Organisation

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dc.contributor.author Alexander Paul Isiko
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:53Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:53Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.issn 21679045
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49268
dc.description.abstract Studies on traditional healing have received a lot of attention from several academic disciplines, including; anthropology, sociology, religion, and medicine. The study of use, practice, organisation, measurement and social distribution of traditional medicine has, over the years, been a case of sociological inquiry. On the other hand, anthropological studies are engrossed in the confluence of traditional healing with witchcraft practices. Whereas the world of medicine academia has been preoccupied with analysing the medicinal values of herbs and their efficacy in the treatment of infections; religious and theological scholars have discussed traditional healing as an extension of spirituality beliefs. None has ventured to analyse the relationship that exist between traditional healing and society organisation since traditional healing practices are society specific. My major proposition is that unlike biomedicine that operates on universal principles, traditional healing practices differ from one society to another, and they are a reflection of the location, beliefs, socio-cultural, economic and political organisation of those societies.  There exists an inextricable relationship between a society’s healing traditions and its socio-cultural, political, economic, religious beliefs, and everyday life. Using Busoga society of Uganda as a case study, this article analyses the interconnectedness between healing and society organisation. It attempts to show how healing traditions proceed from the way societies think and organise themselves. Healing practices are then presented as not only a form of medicine to treat biological infections but an ‘institution’ upon which society’s everyday activities are based.
dc.relation.ispartof Journal of Arts and Humanities
dc.title The Nexus between Traditional Healing and Societal Organisation: Reflections on Busoga Society Socio–Cultural, Economic and Political Organisation
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.mag 2969315798
dc.identifier.lens 099-900-752-669-90X
dc.identifier.volume 8
dc.identifier.issue 8
dc.identifier.spage 71
dc.identifier.epage 88
dc.subject.lens-fields Sociology
dc.subject.lens-fields Nexus (standard)
dc.subject.lens-fields Proposition
dc.subject.lens-fields Everyday life
dc.subject.lens-fields Social distribution
dc.subject.lens-fields Spirituality
dc.subject.lens-fields Discipline
dc.subject.lens-fields Interconnectedness
dc.subject.lens-fields Politics
dc.subject.lens-fields Environmental ethics


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