AIDS, Gender and Economic Development

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Aid Impact
Aid Infection Rate
Aid Policy
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CGE Model
China's HIV
China’s HIV
commercial
Economic Impact
Effective HIV Prevention
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Gender Relational Perspective
Global Aid Policy
HAART
HAART Patient
HAART Program
hiv
HIV Prevention
HIV Transmission
Home Based Care Organizations
Home Based Care Programs
infection
joint
Motorbike Taxi Drivers
nations
nicoli
Pearson Chi2
program
Risky Sexual Behavior
sex
Sex Work
Sex Workers
Small HIV
State Council Aid Working Committee
united
Unprotected Vaginal Sex
Volunteer Caregivers
work

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415673273
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jul 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection of essays, authored by experts across a wide range of disciplines, provides a gendered analysis of the economic choices and structures that contribute to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and the impact of the epidemic on economic and social outcomes. Topics covered include:

  • gender norms, perceptions of risk, and risk-taking behavior among specific populations of women, including sex workers in Nicaragua, African immigrants in France, and university students and urban migrant workers in China
  • malnutrition and poverty as precursors to HIV infection
  • gendered institutions and access to treatment
  • the invisible cost of caregiving.

An introductory essay briefly surveys the social science literature on the gendered nature of the epidemic and identifies key constructs of feminist economic theory that might be productively applied to understanding HIV/AIDS.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Feminist Economics.

Cecilia A. Conrad is Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College and the Stedman-Sumner Professor of Economics at Pomona College. Her research focuses on the impact of race and gender on economic status. Professor Conrad is editor of The Review of Black Political Economy.

Cheryl Doss is a development economist who works on issues of gender, agriculture, and intrahousehold decision-making in Africa. Her current research focuses on women's access to assets and the gender-asset gap. She is Senior Lecturer in Economics and Global Affairs and Director of Graduate Studies for the MA program in International Relations at Yale University.