AIDS, Behavior, and Culture AIDS, Behavior, and Culture
Key Questions in Anthropology

AIDS, Behavior, and Culture

Understanding Evidence-Based Prevention

    • 35,99 €
    • 35,99 €

Publisher Description

AIDS, Behavior, and Culture presents a bold challenge to the prevailing wisdom of “the global AIDS industry” and offers an alternative framework for understanding what works in HIV prevention. Arguing for a behavior-based approach, Green and Ruark make the case that the most effective programs are those that encourage fundamental behavioral changes such as abstinence, delay of sex, faithfulness, and cessation of injection drug use. Successful programs are locally based, low cost, low tech, innovative, and built on existing cultural structures. In contrast, they argue that anthropologists and public health practitioners focus on counseling, testing, condoms, and treatment, and impose their Western values, culture, and political ideologies in an attempt to “liberate” non-Western people from sexual repression and homophobia. This provocative book is essential reading for anyone working in HIV/AIDS prevention, and a stimulating introduction to the key controversies and approaches in global health and medical anthropology for students and general readers.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2016
16 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
300
Pages
PUBLISHER
Taylor and Francis
SIZE
4.7
MB

More Books by Edward C. Green & Allison Herling Ruark

Aids And Stds In Africa Aids And Stds In Africa
2019
Broken Promises Broken Promises
2016
Indigenous Theories of Contagious Disease Indigenous Theories of Contagious Disease
1999

Other Books in This Series

Culture and the Individual Culture and the Individual
2017
The Origin of Cultures The Origin of Cultures
2016
Archaeology Matters Archaeology Matters
2016
How Culture Makes Us Human How Culture Makes Us Human
2016