Much research has examined how to empower the poor to articulate demands for health-enabling living conditions. Less is known about creating receptive social environments where the powerful heed the voices of the poor. We explore the potential for ‘transformative communication’ between the poor and the powerful, through comparing two well-documented case studies of HIV/AIDS management. The Entabeni Project in South Africa sought to empower impoverished women to deliver home-based nursing to people with AIDS. It successfully provided short-term welfare, but did not achieve local leadership or sustainability. The Sonagachi Project in India, an HIV-prevention programme targeting female sex workers, became locally led and sustainable. We highli...
Many biomedical and behavioural HIV/AIDS programmes aimed at prevention, care and treatment have di...
Little research has been conducted on how pre-existing indigenous community resources, especially so...
The empowerment of marginalised communities to lead local responses to HIV/AIDS is a key strategy of...
Whilst much research has examined how to empower poor community members to identify the social roots...
Background This paper examines the potential for community conversations to strengthen positive resp...
What ethical obligations do researchers have to research informants in marginalised communities in s...
We explore the wider social context of an HIV-prevention programme in rural Zimbabwe. We make no com...
Many biomedical and behavioural HIV/AIDS programmes aimed at prevention, care and treatment have dis...
There is much debate about researchers’ ethical obligations to their informants, especially when the...
Health promotion interventions with marginalised groups are increasingly expected to demonstrate gen...
The importance of partnerships between marginalised communities and support agencies (from the publi...
In this paper we discuss our conceptualisation of a ‘health-enabling social environment’, and some o...
Globally, there is a renewed interest in building the local sustainability of HIV/AIDS programmes to...
Community involvement is increasingly identified as a "critical enabler" of an effective HIV/AIDS re...
Many biomedical and behavioural HIV/AIDS programmes aimed at prevention, care and treatment have di...
Little research has been conducted on how pre-existing indigenous community resources, especially so...
The empowerment of marginalised communities to lead local responses to HIV/AIDS is a key strategy of...
Whilst much research has examined how to empower poor community members to identify the social roots...
Background This paper examines the potential for community conversations to strengthen positive resp...
What ethical obligations do researchers have to research informants in marginalised communities in s...
We explore the wider social context of an HIV-prevention programme in rural Zimbabwe. We make no com...
Many biomedical and behavioural HIV/AIDS programmes aimed at prevention, care and treatment have dis...
There is much debate about researchers’ ethical obligations to their informants, especially when the...
Health promotion interventions with marginalised groups are increasingly expected to demonstrate gen...
The importance of partnerships between marginalised communities and support agencies (from the publi...
In this paper we discuss our conceptualisation of a ‘health-enabling social environment’, and some o...
Globally, there is a renewed interest in building the local sustainability of HIV/AIDS programmes to...
Community involvement is increasingly identified as a "critical enabler" of an effective HIV/AIDS re...
Many biomedical and behavioural HIV/AIDS programmes aimed at prevention, care and treatment have di...
Little research has been conducted on how pre-existing indigenous community resources, especially so...
The empowerment of marginalised communities to lead local responses to HIV/AIDS is a key strategy of...