Colonial Biopolitics and Epidemiological Change: The History of Sleeping Sickness in Busoga(Uganda):1850–1962

Authors

  • Aiseta Aisha Islamic University In Uganda
  • Babere Kerata Chacha Laikipia University
  • Ndalila Joseph University of Kabianga, Kerico
  • Nyangena Kenneth Laikpia University

Keywords:

pathogens, environment, ecology, imperialism

Abstract

Busoga has, over time, experienced recurrent waves of sleeping sickness, a phenomenon shaped by its ecological conditions and its proximity to the tsetse-infested shores of Lake Victoria. Before the diffusion of biomedical knowledge, Basoga communities interpreted the disease through cosmological and spiritual frameworks, frequently associating it with curses, witchcraft, or ancestral retribution. Using ecological theory and the concept of ecological imperialism, this article investigates the shifting epidemiological patterns of sleeping sickness in Busoga from 1850 to 1962. It interrogates the interplay between indigenous knowledge systems, environmental change, and the disruptions introduced by colonial penetration, including forced relocations, labour demands, and the restructuring of landscapes. In analysing colonial medical policies and administrative responses, the study illustrates how imperial interventions both mitigated and, at times, exacerbated disease transmission.  The article demonstrates that the history of sleeping sickness in Busoga cannot be understood apart from the complex entanglement of ecology, culture, and colonial power, which collectively shaped the region’s disease environment across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

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Author Biographies

  • Aiseta Aisha , Islamic University In Uganda

    History

  • Babere Kerata Chacha , Laikipia University

    Professor of History

    Department of Social Studies

     

  • Ndalila Joseph, University of Kabianga, Kerico

    Senior lecturer in History and Public administration

    Department of Social Studies at University of Kabianga, Kerico..

     

  • Nyangena Kenneth, Laikpia University

    Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the Department of Social Sciences

     

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Published

2025-12-31