The focus of this article is human rights, ethics and the media in the context of the challenges posed by HIV/ AIDS. Its basic premise is that an effective HIV / AIDS prevention programme cannot succeed if it is not aided by the media that is conscious of the human rights dimension of the epidemic. The paper argues that stigmatisation and discrimination of persons with HIV/AIDS should be rejected as prejudicial to health, for the simple reason that such discrimination would force people with HIV to go underground and in the worst case scenario, could lead to deliberate transmission of the virus as a reaction to societal hostility
This article explores key issues related to the agitation for human rights in Mozambique and its wea...
The paper is based on two case studies on home-based care in Kweneng district, Botswana. in March-Ap...
Research on Western mainstream media’s framing of HIV/AIDS in the 1980’s, showed that media narrativ...
A health and human rights framework provides a comprehensive perspective for understanding complex i...
Southern African countries have the highest HIV infection rates in the world. In most of the countri...
The article explains the socio-economic impact of HIV/AIDS-related stigma in Botswana. It identifies...
Social, political and economic problems since Zimbabwe’s post-independence period have resulted in t...
Human rights discourse in health advocacy is largely correlated with experiences of vulnerability, m...
Discriminating people living with HIV/AIDS not only causes personal suffering and loss of dignity, b...
The primary goal of this study is to examine and determine factors influencing stigmatisation and di...
This paper traces the development of policies dealing with HIV/AIDS in Botswana from their beginnin...
Copyright © 2013 Eric Koka et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
New publication from Fanny Chabrol in the journal Developing World Bioethics: Biomedicine, Public H...
The systemic consequences of the HIV/AIDS pandemic in South Africa are evident not only in demograp...
Botswana has been hailed as one of the few African countries that has tackled the HIV and AIDS scour...
This article explores key issues related to the agitation for human rights in Mozambique and its wea...
The paper is based on two case studies on home-based care in Kweneng district, Botswana. in March-Ap...
Research on Western mainstream media’s framing of HIV/AIDS in the 1980’s, showed that media narrativ...
A health and human rights framework provides a comprehensive perspective for understanding complex i...
Southern African countries have the highest HIV infection rates in the world. In most of the countri...
The article explains the socio-economic impact of HIV/AIDS-related stigma in Botswana. It identifies...
Social, political and economic problems since Zimbabwe’s post-independence period have resulted in t...
Human rights discourse in health advocacy is largely correlated with experiences of vulnerability, m...
Discriminating people living with HIV/AIDS not only causes personal suffering and loss of dignity, b...
The primary goal of this study is to examine and determine factors influencing stigmatisation and di...
This paper traces the development of policies dealing with HIV/AIDS in Botswana from their beginnin...
Copyright © 2013 Eric Koka et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
New publication from Fanny Chabrol in the journal Developing World Bioethics: Biomedicine, Public H...
The systemic consequences of the HIV/AIDS pandemic in South Africa are evident not only in demograp...
Botswana has been hailed as one of the few African countries that has tackled the HIV and AIDS scour...
This article explores key issues related to the agitation for human rights in Mozambique and its wea...
The paper is based on two case studies on home-based care in Kweneng district, Botswana. in March-Ap...
Research on Western mainstream media’s framing of HIV/AIDS in the 1980’s, showed that media narrativ...