Eight years ago the anthropologist Ralph Bolton (1995: 289) wrote: ‘Prevention efforts have enjoyed limited success – behaviours have changed to some degree in some places, but no thanks to our research’. Unfortunately, these words still hold true today. This chapter explores some of the reasons why anthropologists have struggled to contribute to public health programmes seeking to prevent the transmission of HIV. In particular, it shows that there has been a long-standing resistance to working within public health programmes that ‘target’ epidemiologically-defined groups of people (such as men who have sex with other men, intravenous drug users, sex workers) and risky behaviours (such as unprotected anal intercourse, unprotected vaginal in...
Condomless sex between gay men, also known as bareback sex, has been a popular object of research si...
The apocalyptic threat of AIDS, combined with recent ethnological developments, is promoting an anth...
Abstract-The social identity of HIV/AIDS in the U.S. has been shaped, for the most part, by two fact...
This think piece asks readers to consider how the science of anthropology has contributed to (re)cat...
HIV/AIDS is among the most intensively studied health topics in anthropology. Given that it is a sti...
The complexity and scale of the AIDS crisis in Africa has so far eluded effective prevention and tre...
The complexity and scale of the AIDS crisis in Africa has so far eluded effective prevention and tre...
Much like physicians who suffer from therapeutic impotence in their inability to cure, anthropologis...
Medical science has up to now not discovered a means to fight HIV and it is obvious that the epidemi...
The emergence of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Britain in 1982 coincided almost exactly ...
Youth living in the southeastern regions of the United States, particularly those of ethnic minority...
This paper examines the ways in which populations at risk of HIV in the developed world have encultu...
Any social scientist hopes to make a contribution, albeit small, to the improvement of the lives of ...
This paper examines the risk discourses of Sydney gay men who had recently become HIV positive. 92 i...
For twenty years, the HIV epidemic has been defined largely by the dominant Western medical system o...
Condomless sex between gay men, also known as bareback sex, has been a popular object of research si...
The apocalyptic threat of AIDS, combined with recent ethnological developments, is promoting an anth...
Abstract-The social identity of HIV/AIDS in the U.S. has been shaped, for the most part, by two fact...
This think piece asks readers to consider how the science of anthropology has contributed to (re)cat...
HIV/AIDS is among the most intensively studied health topics in anthropology. Given that it is a sti...
The complexity and scale of the AIDS crisis in Africa has so far eluded effective prevention and tre...
The complexity and scale of the AIDS crisis in Africa has so far eluded effective prevention and tre...
Much like physicians who suffer from therapeutic impotence in their inability to cure, anthropologis...
Medical science has up to now not discovered a means to fight HIV and it is obvious that the epidemi...
The emergence of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Britain in 1982 coincided almost exactly ...
Youth living in the southeastern regions of the United States, particularly those of ethnic minority...
This paper examines the ways in which populations at risk of HIV in the developed world have encultu...
Any social scientist hopes to make a contribution, albeit small, to the improvement of the lives of ...
This paper examines the risk discourses of Sydney gay men who had recently become HIV positive. 92 i...
For twenty years, the HIV epidemic has been defined largely by the dominant Western medical system o...
Condomless sex between gay men, also known as bareback sex, has been a popular object of research si...
The apocalyptic threat of AIDS, combined with recent ethnological developments, is promoting an anth...
Abstract-The social identity of HIV/AIDS in the U.S. has been shaped, for the most part, by two fact...