Literature DB >> 20432080

Engendering care: HIV, humanitarian assistance in Africa and the reproduction of gender stereotypes.

Deborah Mindry1.   

Abstract

This paper draws upon recent research in Durban, South Africa to unravel the complexities of care ethics in the context of humanitarian aid. It investigates how the gendering of care shapes the provision of aid in the context of the HIV in Africa constructing an image of 'virile' and 'violent' African masculinity. Humanitarian organisations construct imagined relations of caring, invoking notions of a shared humanity as informing the imperative to facilitate change. This paper draws on varied examples of research and NGO activity to illustrate how these relations of care are strongly gendered. Humanitarian interventions that invoke universalising conceptions of need could instead draw on feminist care ethics that seeks to balance rights, justice and care in ways that attend to the webs of relationships through which specific lived realities are shaped. Essentialising feminized discourses on care result in a skewed analysis of international crises that invariably construct women (and children) as victims in need of care, which at best ignore the lived experiences of men and, at worst, cast men as virile and violent vectors of disease and social disorder.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20432080      PMCID: PMC4154477          DOI: 10.1080/13691051003768140

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Health Sex        ISSN: 1369-1058


  14 in total

1.  Effects of South African men's having witnessed abuse of their mothers during childhood on their levels of violence in adulthood.

Authors:  Naeemah Abrahams; Rachel Jewkes
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2005-08-30       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Violence, rape, and sexual coercion: everyday love in a South African township.

Authors:  K Wood; R Jewkes
Journal:  Gend Dev       Date:  1997-06

3.  Nongovernmental organizations, "grassroots," and the politics of virtue.

Authors:  D Mindry
Journal:  Signs (Chic)       Date:  2001

4.  Why multiple sexual partners?

Authors:  James D Shelton
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2009-08-01       Impact factor: 79.321

Review 5.  Cultural politics and masculinities: multiple-partners in historical perspective in KwaZulu-Natal.

Authors:  Mark Hunter
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2005-05

6.  Men's involvement in the South African family: engendering change in the AIDS era.

Authors:  Catherine M Montgomery; Victoria Hosegood; Joanna Busza; Ian M Timaeus
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2005-11-21       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 7.  The forgotten fifty per cent: a review of sexual and reproductive health research and programs focused on boys and young men in sub-Saharan Africa.

Authors:  C A Varga
Journal:  Afr J Reprod Health       Date:  2001-12

8.  New heterosexually transmitted HIV infections in married or cohabiting couples in urban Zambia and Rwanda: an analysis of survey and clinical data.

Authors:  Kristin L Dunkle; Rob Stephenson; Etienne Karita; Elwyn Chomba; Kayitesi Kayitenkore; Cheswa Vwalika; Lauren Greenberg; Susan Allen
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2008-06-28       Impact factor: 79.321

Review 9.  Age and economic asymmetries in the sexual relationships of adolescent girls in sub-Saharan Africa.

Authors:  Nancy Luke
Journal:  Stud Fam Plann       Date:  2003-06

10.  Gender-based violence, relationship power, and risk of HIV infection in women attending antenatal clinics in South Africa.

Authors:  Kristin L Dunkle; Rachel K Jewkes; Heather C Brown; Glenda E Gray; James A McIntryre; Siobán D Harlow
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2004-05-01       Impact factor: 79.321

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  1 in total

1.  'Men usually say that HIV testing is for women': gender dynamics and perceptions of HIV testing in Lesotho.

Authors:  Abby L DiCarlo; Joanne E Mantell; Robert H Remien; Allison Zerbe; Danielle Morris; Blanche Pitt; Elaine J Abrams; Wafaa M El-Sadr
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2014-05-22
  1 in total

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