| Literature DB >> 26350433 |
Amanda P Viitanen1, Christopher J Colvin2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adherence to traditional notions of masculinity has been identified as an important driver in the perpetuation of numerous health and social problems, including gender-based violence and HIV. With the largest generalized HIV epidemic in the world and high rates of violence against women, the need for gender-transformative work in South Africa is broadly accepted in activist circles and at the national and community level. Because of the integral role men play in both of these epidemics, initiatives and strategies that engage men in promoting gender equality have emerged over the last decade and the evidence base supporting the effectiveness of masculinities-based interventions is growing. However, little research exists on men's receptivity to the messages delivered in these programs.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; health determinants; health intervention; health systems and gender
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26350433 PMCID: PMC4563102 DOI: 10.3402/gha.v8.27860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
Levels of engagement in work with men and boys
| Level of engagement | Examples and goals |
|---|---|
| Individual education | Responsible fatherhood programs, youth mentoring. GOAL: individual recognition that violence can be prevented. EXAMPLE: ‘One Man Can’ workshops that educate participants about GBV and encourage critical reflection on each participant's own experiences and acts of GBV (Sonke) |
| Community education | Face-to face programs, social marketing, media strategies. GOAL: reach groups of people with information and resources. EXAMPLE: Door-to-door campaigns and ‘open-airs’ at shopping centers to raise awareness at HIV testing for men (Khululeka) |
| Providers/professionals education | Workplace-based prevention, resource provision, and technical assistance. GOAL: educate healthcare providers, teachers, police, and other professionals who can play an important role in promoting gender equality and advocating GBV prevention. EXAMPLE: Training with lay HIV counselors about the needs and perspectives of HIV-positive men accessing HIV care (Khululeka) |
| Engagement of communities | Community mobilization efforts, awards programs, linkage of violence to other community issues. GOAL: bring communities together. EXAMPLE: ‘Community Action Teams’ that coordinate community-led gender transformative programing (Sonke) |
| Changing practices | Change traditionally male-dominated groups (sports, social groups) perceptions as to acceptability of women-directed violence. GOAL: reshape societal norms. EXAMPLE: Coaching of local soccer team as a support group project aimed at shifting perceptions of masculinity among older boys (Khululeka) |
| Effecting policy and legislation | School anti-violence programs, country-specific laws protecting victims. GOAL: support of a healthy society that is violence-free. EXAMPLE: Country-level reviews across Southern Africa of health and GBV policies and the involvement of men and boys in policy and programing (Sonke) |
Adapted from Flood (39).
Summary of studies included in synthesis
| Study | Summary of methodology and key sources |
|---|---|
| Evaluation of Sonke's ‘One Man Can’ campaign | Conducted between 2008 and 2010 in six of the nine South African provinces. Mixed methodology, including 9 focus groups, 60 in-depth interviews, and 181 phone interviews. Participants were primarily black South Africans in economically marginalized communities with high HIV prevalence ( |
| Ethnography of Khululeka Men's Support Group | Conducted between 2007 and 2011. Ethnographic study with members of the Khululeka Support Group in Gugulethu, Cape Town, as well as with community members, NGO staff and volunteers, and government officials ( |
| Evaluation of Sonke's ‘Red Card’ campaign against child sexual exploitation | Conducted in 2010 and 2011. Process evaluation of Sonke and partner NGO's implementation of the Red Card campaign. In-depth interviews with 33 NGO staff and volunteers as well as community stakeholders in Cape Town and Johannesburg ( |
| Short-term ethnographic studies of HIV, gender, rights, religion, and traditional healing in Town Two, Khayelitsha, Cape Town | Conducted in 2009 and 2010 with Benjamin Sieff and Liese Pruitt. Short-term ethnographic field research in Town Two, Khayelitsha, Cape Town with community members and NGO staff and volunteers on HIV, community mobilization, human rights, religion and traditional healing ( |