Literature DB >> 25860522

Dilemmas and tensions facing a faith-based organisation promoting HIVprevention among young people in South Africa.

Marisa Casale1, Stephanie Nixon, Sarah Flicker, Clara Rubincam, Angelique Jenney.   

Abstract

Faith-based organisations (FBOs) are receiving growing attention for their roles in addressing HIV and AIDS in southern Africa. These roles, however, are not without philosophical challenges. Yet, to date, most references to the successes or limitations of FBOs have remained the domain of theoretical and, often, ideological debate. In this context, discussions about the roles of faith and FBOs in responding to HIV and AIDS often evoke extreme positions-either advocating for or critiquing their involvement. In place of this there is a need for empirical evidence and analyses that shed light on both the challenges and opportunities of faith-based HIV-prevention programming. This article presents a critical sociological analysis of the complexities confronting one FBO in its effort to deliver an abstinence-focused HIV-prevention programme to school-going adolescents in a poor peri-urban area of South Africa. As one aspect of a larger mixed-methods evaluation, this analysis is based on 11 focus group discussions, variously held with parents, teachers, learners and programme facilitators, in an effort to determine how and why the participants perceived the programme to work. We present and analyse four sources of tension appearing within the data which relate to the programme's faith-based orientation: a) enthusiasm for sexual abstinence despite awareness of the structural constraints; b) a dichotomous framing of behaviours (i.e. good versus bad); c) mixed messages about condoms; and d) administering faith-based programming within secular public schools. Through this analysis we aim to identify opportunities and challenges for faith-based HIV-prevention efforts more broadly. We argue that any assessment of faith-based HIV-prevention programming ought to respect and reflect its complexity as well as the complexity of the context within which it operates.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HIV/AIDS; critical social science; programme evaluation; school children; sexuality; youth programmes

Year:  2010        PMID: 25860522     DOI: 10.2989/16085906.2010.517480

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Afr J AIDS Res        ISSN: 1608-5906            Impact factor:   1.300


  5 in total

1.  Religiosity for promotion of behaviors likely to reduce new HIV infections in Uganda: a study among Muslim youth in Wakiso District.

Authors:  Magid Kagimu; David Guwatudde; Charles Rwabukwali; Sarah Kaye; Yusuf Walakira; Dick Ainomugisha
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2013-12

2.  Fighting down the scourge, building up the church: organisational constraints in religious involvement with HIV/AIDS in Mozambique.

Authors:  Victor Agadjanian; Cecilia Menjívar
Journal:  Glob Public Health       Date:  2011-07-26

3.  Beyond Morality: Assessment of the Capacity of Faith-based Organizations (FBOS) in Responding to the HIV/AIDS Challenge in Southeastern Nigeria.

Authors:  Eze Edlyne Anugwom; Kenechukwu Anugwom
Journal:  Iran J Public Health       Date:  2018-01       Impact factor: 1.429

4.  "An Unchanging God in a Changing World": Sexual Practice and Decision-Making among Christian Women in South Africa.

Authors:  Shehani Perera; Alison Swartz
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2021-06-11

Review 5.  Adolescent condom use in Southern Africa: narrative systematic review and conceptual model of multilevel barriers and facilitators.

Authors:  Áine Aventin; Sarah Gordon; Christina Laurenzi; Stephan Rabie; Mark Tomlinson; Maria Lohan; Jackie Stewart; Allen Thurston; Lynne Lohfeld; G J Melendez-Torres; Moroesi Makhetha; Yeukai Chideya; Sarah Skeen
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2021-06-26       Impact factor: 3.295

  5 in total

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