Literature DB >> 21161764

Global expectations and local practices: HIV support groups in the Gambia.

Rebecca Cassidy1.   

Abstract

This paper looks at the ways that people living with HIV in the Gambia, as members of HIV support groups, engaged with the programmes available to them in this context. People living with HIV engage with the global in a variety of ways. Following Ong and Collier this paper analyses the way in which people in this context experience and negotiate with the "global assemblage" around international HIV work. This can be observed in everyday practice in the formation of networks and partnerships linking people and their activities into international structures. Using qualitative methods and a grounded theoretical approach, the research followed events around HIV treatment in the Gambia 2006-2007. Looking at the support societies and their members' struggles to gain some material support, findings show how support group members negotiated and expressed agency within the available structures. They make use of accepted frames of international action which bypass the state, presenting an internationally linked "biological citizenship" which brings associated opportunities to access resources. Through the intervention of the president and his "cure" programme, this case also illustrates that people's commitment to the value structures implicit in these funding streams may not be as strong as might be assumed. In these circumstances two alternate treatment programmes, linked to very different values, were on offer, both backed up by the powerful machinery of either the state or international funding. The negotiation by people living with HIV of these avenues through which to acquire benefits and so support and health, calls into question assumptions of a "buy in" to global ideas and values without further scrutiny of the ways in which such assemblages function in different contexts.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 21161764     DOI: 10.1080/09540121.2010.525612

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Care        ISSN: 0954-0121


  4 in total

1.  Qualitative interviews with mentor mothers living with HIV: potential impacts of role and coping strategies.

Authors:  Lebohang Dhlamini; Lucia Knight; Heidi van Rooyen; Alastair van Heerden; Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2012-07-11       Impact factor: 5.396

2.  Palliative care needs in Malawi: Care received by people living with HIV.

Authors:  Esmie Mkwinda; Eucebious Lekalakala-Mokgele
Journal:  Curationis       Date:  2016-06-29

3.  The Framing and Fashioning of Therapeutic Citizenship Among People Living With HIV Taking Antiretroviral Therapy in Uganda.

Authors:  Steve Russell; Stella Namukwaya; Flavia Zalwango; Janet Seeley
Journal:  Qual Health Res       Date:  2015-08-05

4.  Redemption of the "spoiled identity:" the role of HIV-positive individuals in HIV care cascade interventions.

Authors:  Carol S Camlin; Edwin D Charlebois; Elvin Geng; Fred Semitala; Jeanna Wallenta; Monica Getahun; Leatitia Kampiire; Elizabeth A Bukusi; Norton Sang; Dalsone Kwarisiima; Tamara D Clark; Maya L Petersen; Moses R Kamya; Diane V Havlir
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 5.396

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.