Political Economy of HIV in Africa

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Aid Prevention
Aid Response
AIDs
AIDS Indicator Survey
Alan Whiteside OBE
Alinafe Chimphonda
Bridget O'Laughlin
Cash Transfer Project
Category=GTP
class and health inequity
Conditional Cash Transfers
Critical Horizons
Danya Long
David G. Lalloo
De Walque
Deborah Johnston
DHS Survey
Eleanor MacPherson
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Female Fish Traders
global health policy
health systems in Africa
High HIV Prevalence
HIV
HIV Prevalence
HIV prevention political economy Africa
HIV Prevention Response
HIV Risk
HIV Transmission
HIV/AIDs
HIVAIDs
Image Study
IPV
Janet Seeley
John Sadalaki
Joyce Wamoyi
Justin O. Parkhurst
Kevin Deane
Lawrence Nkhwazi
Mackwellings Phiri
Mark Hunter
Matteo Rizzo
Medical Male Circumcision
Microfinance
Microfinance Organisations
Microfinance Programmes
Moritz Hunsmann
Nicola Desmond
Political Economy of Health
Reduce HIV Risk
Review of African Political Economy
Risky Sexual Behaviour
Sally Theobald
Sexual HIV Transmission
Social Drivers
social epidemiology
Sophie Harman
structural determinants of disease
Structural Drivers
Transactional Sex
transactional sex economics
Victor Mwapasa
Victoria Nyongopa
World Development Report
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367234829
  • Weight: 330g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Biomedical revolutions seem to have radically altered the environment for HIV transmission: anti-retrovirals (ARVs) and drugs to reduce mother-to-child transmission promise to cut HIV transmission rates, as does male medical circumcision. However, the hopeful messages of UNAIDS are tempered with warning about expenditure shortfalls and calls for funding. Contributions to this book remind us that, along with the external financial constraints, there have been new fractures in state power and in the organisation of health systems. More than this, the book fundamentally calls into question whether biomedical interventions can change the social roots of this disease. As well as considering new policy approaches, the book reasserts a long-standing political economy approach to HIV and to adapt it to reflect new competing theoretical approaches. The chapters attempt to connect the debates about HIV/AIDS to larger discussions about globalisation, class differentiation, inequity and uneven development in African countries. This book was originally published as a special issue of Review of African Political Economy.

Deborah Johnston is a Reader in Development Economics at SOAS University of London, UK. She is a development economist whose research looks at the application of economics, political economy and feminist economics to issues of poverty, ill-health and wellbeing. Kevin Deane is a Senior Lecturer in International Development at the University of Northampton, UK. His educational background is in development economics, but his research draws on a range of disciplines including political economy, development studies, economics, public health and epidemiology, with an application to the economic and social drivers of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Matteo Rizzo is Senior Lecturer in Development Research Methods at the Department of Development Studies, Senior Lecturer in the Economics of Africa at the Department of Economics and a Member of the Centre of African Studies, all at SOAS University of London, UK. He is an editorial board member of the Review of African Political Economy.