Since the 1990s, the HIV/AIDS epidemic has increasingly impacted minority groups in the United States, particularly African Americans. Why is this happening? Comparative studies of developing nations have convincingly established a relationship between concentrated poverty, ethnic boundaries, and lack of effective governmental response as contributing to high levels of infection in those countries. To date, however, no study has sought to apply these insights to the American context. This dissertation endeavors to show that, first, marginalization of U.S. sub-groups most at risk of infection is largely a product of poor health outcomes associated with concentrated urban poverty and economic stratification. Second, this sub-group marginaliza...
Persons belonging to racial/ethnic minorities are disproportionately affected by human immunodeficie...
African Americans face the most severe burden of HIV of all racial/ethnic groups in the United State...
Among ethnic minorities in the United States, blacks and Hispanics, who compose 12 percent and 7 per...
Informed behavior change as an HIV prevention tool has yielded unequal successes across populations....
This article discusses a preliminary comparison of responses to AIDS in ethnic communities and their...
The greatest number of persons living with HIV in the United States are now living in the South, and...
HIV/AIDS disproportionately affects minority races and ethnicities in the United States. To reduce r...
HIV infection among racial and ethnic minorities is an ongoing health crisis. The disproportionate i...
The Southern United States has been disproportionately affected by HIV diagnoses and mortality. To i...
The Southern United States has been disproportionately affected by HIV diagnoses and mortality. To i...
Black Americans have been disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS since the epidemic's beginning, an...
This dissertation is an ethnographic and epidemiological investigation of HIV/AIDS treatment and pre...
This article examines factors responsible for the stark racial disparities in HIV infection in the U...
The dissertation examines the salience of race over the course of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Unite...
Ten years ago, Cathy Cohen published the book Boundaries of Blackness: AIDS and the Breakdown of Bl...
Persons belonging to racial/ethnic minorities are disproportionately affected by human immunodeficie...
African Americans face the most severe burden of HIV of all racial/ethnic groups in the United State...
Among ethnic minorities in the United States, blacks and Hispanics, who compose 12 percent and 7 per...
Informed behavior change as an HIV prevention tool has yielded unequal successes across populations....
This article discusses a preliminary comparison of responses to AIDS in ethnic communities and their...
The greatest number of persons living with HIV in the United States are now living in the South, and...
HIV/AIDS disproportionately affects minority races and ethnicities in the United States. To reduce r...
HIV infection among racial and ethnic minorities is an ongoing health crisis. The disproportionate i...
The Southern United States has been disproportionately affected by HIV diagnoses and mortality. To i...
The Southern United States has been disproportionately affected by HIV diagnoses and mortality. To i...
Black Americans have been disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS since the epidemic's beginning, an...
This dissertation is an ethnographic and epidemiological investigation of HIV/AIDS treatment and pre...
This article examines factors responsible for the stark racial disparities in HIV infection in the U...
The dissertation examines the salience of race over the course of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Unite...
Ten years ago, Cathy Cohen published the book Boundaries of Blackness: AIDS and the Breakdown of Bl...
Persons belonging to racial/ethnic minorities are disproportionately affected by human immunodeficie...
African Americans face the most severe burden of HIV of all racial/ethnic groups in the United State...
Among ethnic minorities in the United States, blacks and Hispanics, who compose 12 percent and 7 per...