| Literature DB >> 29506439 |
Robert Lorway1, Lisa Lazarus1, Claudyne Chevrier1, Shamshad Khan2, Helgar K Musyoki3, John Mathenge4,5, Peninah Mwangi6, Pascal Macharia1, Parinita Bhattacharjee1,7, Shajy Isac1,8, Joshua Kimani1,9,10, Gloria Gaaki10, Marissa Becker1, Stephen Moses1, James Blanchard1.
Abstract
This paper highlights important environmental dimensions of HIV vulnerability by describing how the sex trade operates in Nairobi, Kenya. Although sex workers there encounter various forms of violence and harassment, as do sex workers globally, we highlight how they do not merely fall victim to a set of environmental risks but also act upon their social environment, thereby remaking it, as they strive to protect their health and financial interests. In so doing, we illustrate the mutual constitution of 'agency' and 'structure' in social network formations that take shape in everyday lived spaces. Our findings point to the need to expand the focus of interventions to consider local ecologies of security in order to place the local knowledges, tactics, and capacities that communities might already possess on centre stage in interventions. Planning, implementing, and monitoring interventions with a consideration of these ecologies would tie interventions not only to the risk reduction goals of global public health policy, but also to the very real and grounded financial priorities of what it means to try to safely earn a living through sex work.Keywords: HIV; Kenya; affect; female sex work; security
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29506439 DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2018.1442487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Public Health ISSN: 1744-1692