Samba Diop's research while affiliated with University of Sciences, Techniques and Technology of Bamako and other places

What is this page?


This page lists the scientific contributions of an author, who either does not have a ResearchGate profile, or has not yet added these contributions to their profile.

It was automatically created by ResearchGate to create a record of this author's body of work. We create such pages to advance our goal of creating and maintaining the most comprehensive scientific repository possible. In doing so, we process publicly available (personal) data relating to the author as a member of the scientific community.

If you're a ResearchGate member, you can follow this page to keep up with this author's work.

If you are this author, and you don't want us to display this page anymore, please let us know.

Publications (3)


The evolution of Target Malaria’s engagement strategy: an iterative process (Pare Toe et al., 2022).
Still of a video explaining the swarm sampling activity, used to explain entomological activities to local residents before askign for their permission to carry out the activity (copyright @Target Malaria).
Still from the video tour of the Target Malaria Mali insectary and laboratory at the University of Sciences, Techniques and Technologies of Bamako.
Example of a visual developed to support engagement with stakeholders at community level, describing the process of collecting mosquitoes from local sites and bringing them to the lab to be studied (copyright @Target Malaria).
Stakeholder engagement in the development of genetically modified mosquitoes for malaria control in West Africa: lessons learned from 10 years of Target Malaria’s work in Mali
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2024

·

46 Reads

Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology

Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology

·

Souleymane Kodio

·

Hatouma Samoura

·

[...]

·

Mamadou B. Coulibaly

From 2012 to 2023, the Malaria Research and Training Center (MRTC), based out of the University of Sciences, Techniques and Technologies of Bamako (USTTB), was part of the Target Malaria research consortium working towards developing novel gene drive-based tools for controlling populations of malaria vector mosquitoes. As part of this work, Target Malaria Mali has undertaken a range of in-depth engagement activities with the communities where their research is conducted and with other stakeholders nationally. These activities were meant to ensure that the project’s activities took place with the agreement of those communities, and that those communities were able to play a role in shaping the project’s approach to ensure that its eventual outcomes were in line with their needs and concerns. This paper aims to conduct a critical assessment of those 10 years of stakeholder engagement in order to identify good practices which can inform future engagement work on gene drive research in West Africa. It sets out a range of approaches and practices that enabled the Target Malaria Mali team to engage a variety of stakeholders, to share information, collect feedback, and determine community agreement, in a manner that was inclusive, effective, and culturally appropriate. These can be useful tools for those working on gene drive research and other area-wide vector control methods in West African contexts to ensure that their research is aligned with the interests of the communities who are intended to be its ultimate beneficiaries, and to allow those communities to play a meaningful role in the research process.

Download
Share

Experimenting with co-development: A qualitative study of gene drive research for malaria control in Mali

March 2021

·

52 Reads

·

8 Citations

Social Science & Medicine

We investigate how technology ‘co-development’ (between researchers, stakeholders and local communities) is framed in practice by those developing gene drive mosquitos for malaria eradication. Our case study focuses on UK and Mali-based researchers planning to undertake the first field trials in Mali of gene drive mosquitos for malaria control. While they and the wider gene drive research community are explicitly committed to the principle of co-development, how this is framed and practiced is not clear. Through qualitative analysis of 34 interviews complemented by observation and documentary research conducted in 2018, we identify and compare ten framings of co-development mobilised by UK and Malian researchers and stakeholders. For Malians, co-development reflected Mali’s broader socio-political context and a desire for African scientific independence and leadership. It was mobilised to secure community and stakeholder support for gene drive mosquito field trials, through outreach, building local scientific capacity and developing those institutions (e.g. regulatory) necessary for field trials to go ahead. For UK participants, co-development was also concerned with scientific capacity-building, knowledge exchange between researchers, and stakeholder and community outreach to secure consent for field trials. Overall, our findings suggest co-development is opening up previously expert-dominated spaces as researchers attempt to take responsibility for the societal implications of their work. However, its main function is as a project management tool to enable and instrumentally support technological development, field trials and eventual deployment. This function extends into areas which are traditionally the responsibility of the state, such as regulatory development, facilitated by Mali’s fragile political and economic situation. Paradoxically, co-development simultaneously depoliticises gene drive, masking power relations and closing down substantive debate and agency. Characterised by extreme poverty, conflict and weak institutions, Mali may become a site for technological experimentation where there is little interrogation of gene drive or its governance.


Fig 1. Listening and talking in Burkina Faso. 2015 Target Malaria-Imperial College London. Photographer: Axel Fassio. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007233.g001
Knowledge engagement in gene drive research for malaria control

April 2019

·

259 Reads

·

64 Citations

Citations (2)


... Our data set comprises 35 interview transcripts and a workshop report. The methods for collecting the interview data are described in two previous publications on gene drive governance in Mali and Uganda (Hartley et al. 2021a;Hartley et al. 2021b). The first set of transcripts consist of 16 semi-structured interviews conducted in Mali in 2018 with Target Malaria natural scientists including molecular biologist and entomologist specialists (M1, M5, M6, M9, M16), independent natural scientists (M10, M11), social scientist engagement experts (M2, M3, M4, M8, M15), independent ethics experts (M7, M14), a regulator (M13) and community representative (M12) (ethics approval provided by the University of Exeter Business School eUEBNS001032). ...

Reference:

Situating the social sciences in responsible innovation in the global south: the case of gene drive mosquitoes
Experimenting with co-development: A qualitative study of gene drive research for malaria control in Mali
  • Citing Article
  • March 2021

Social Science & Medicine

... As aptly noted by Hartley et al., "There is frequent slippage to a reductive rendering of engagement as the right thing to do or as a way to secure public acceptance." [89]. Such programming and general notions permeate from WHO GMM [27] and NASEM [39]. ...

Knowledge engagement in gene drive research for malaria control
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases