There has been little research into how the diverse cultures within Papua New Guinea interpret, represent and understand the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Using qualitative ethnographic research, this study examines how incoming ideas about AIDS relate to the existing cultural frameworks of a rural Christian community. Although Lelet respondents in New Ireland have recourse to indigenous conceptions, apocalyptic Christianity is the most influential framework in their understanding of AIDS. Two interconnected issues are examined: how the epidemic is understood in apocalyptic terms, and how this affects practical approach to the disease. The paper indicates a need for more research into the stances taken by different Christian groups towards HIV/AIDS. T...
In tandem with the relentless spread of HIV infection throughout the world is a proliferation of way...
There has long been reason to anticipate a major heterosexual epidemic of acquired immunodeficiency ...
Cultures all over the world have evolved illness representations that can accommodate not only new d...
This paper explores an ongoing dialogue about Christianity in light of the recent influx of HIV and ...
The recognition that HIV prevention materials need to be adapted to local cultures is not often suff...
There is growing recognition of the importance of religion and religious beliefs as they relate to t...
Although HIV/Aids is a worldwide phenomenon, the challenges they pose are always related to the part...
Abstract: News that one is HIV infected is often seen as a death sentence. This paper uses a re-rea...
Using the example of the Catholic Church in Papua New Guinea (PNG), Idetail how, through praxis, it ...
The churches are crucial actors in the response to Papua New Guineas growing problem with HIV/AIDS, ...
Concurrent with the global spread of HIV, the human immunodeficiency virus, are multiple ways of com...
In his conceptualisation of pastoral power, Michel Foucault argues that modern healthcare practices ...
HIV is one of the most obscure viruses that humankind has had to face in recent times. Compounding t...
The HIV epidemic in Papua New Guinea is now described as a generalized epidemic; that is, more than ...
Papua New Guinea's large landmass and population of 7 million stand out among the scattered islands ...
In tandem with the relentless spread of HIV infection throughout the world is a proliferation of way...
There has long been reason to anticipate a major heterosexual epidemic of acquired immunodeficiency ...
Cultures all over the world have evolved illness representations that can accommodate not only new d...
This paper explores an ongoing dialogue about Christianity in light of the recent influx of HIV and ...
The recognition that HIV prevention materials need to be adapted to local cultures is not often suff...
There is growing recognition of the importance of religion and religious beliefs as they relate to t...
Although HIV/Aids is a worldwide phenomenon, the challenges they pose are always related to the part...
Abstract: News that one is HIV infected is often seen as a death sentence. This paper uses a re-rea...
Using the example of the Catholic Church in Papua New Guinea (PNG), Idetail how, through praxis, it ...
The churches are crucial actors in the response to Papua New Guineas growing problem with HIV/AIDS, ...
Concurrent with the global spread of HIV, the human immunodeficiency virus, are multiple ways of com...
In his conceptualisation of pastoral power, Michel Foucault argues that modern healthcare practices ...
HIV is one of the most obscure viruses that humankind has had to face in recent times. Compounding t...
The HIV epidemic in Papua New Guinea is now described as a generalized epidemic; that is, more than ...
Papua New Guinea's large landmass and population of 7 million stand out among the scattered islands ...
In tandem with the relentless spread of HIV infection throughout the world is a proliferation of way...
There has long been reason to anticipate a major heterosexual epidemic of acquired immunodeficiency ...
Cultures all over the world have evolved illness representations that can accommodate not only new d...