Literature DB >> 22069802

Navigating the AIDS industry: being poor and positive in Tanzania.

Jelke Boesten1.   

Abstract

This article shows how poor people living with HIV/AIDS in Tanzania navigate a myriad of actors, agencies and organizations to obtain the aid they need to survive. It focuses on community-based organizations which establish networks of care through which people obtain care, treatment and financial support. A case study of a roadside town in Tanzania illustrates that these community-based networks of care — essential to the survival of many — are partly the product of the AIDS industry, which encourages the establishment of community-based organizations and voluntary service delivery rather than more formalized systems of care. Community-based organizations, however, are so poorly supported that they often deploy self-destructive strategies. The need to strategically navigate the AIDS industry creates tension and even conflict among HIV-positive activists, the people they represent and the wider community, which undermines rather than strengthens community-based interventions. Whilst the AIDS industry promises inclusion of HIV-positive people in the response to HIV/AIDS, it succeeds only partially, with the result that it may potentially do more harm than good.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22069802     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2011.01713.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Change        ISSN: 0012-155X


  1 in total

1.  'TARMACKING' IN THE MILLENNIUM CITY: SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL TRAJECTORIES OF EMPOWERMENT AND DEVELOPMENT IN KISUMU, KENYA.

Authors:  Ruth J Prince
Journal:  Africa (Lond)       Date:  2013-11
  1 in total

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