Not Waiting for a Cure Oral History Project

Not Waiting for a Cure Oral History Project
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Total Pages:
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Genre: Electronic books
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This project documents Minnesota's response to the AIDS epidemic from a variety of personal and sociopolitical perspectives. Nineteen narrators discuss the reasons for their AIDS activism and the effects of the epidemic on their faith, their commitment to other issues, and their image of the United States. Interviews were conducted in 1994 and 1995 as the epidemic entered its second decade--a time when some of the narrators, long involved in the AIDS crisis, were facing their own deaths from the disease.

HIV Prevention in Minnesota

HIV Prevention in Minnesota
Author: Minnesota. Department of Health. Commissioner's Task Force on AIDS.
Publisher:
Total Pages: 166
Release: 1989
Genre: AIDS (Disease)
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Ending HIV/AIDS in Minnesota

Ending HIV/AIDS in Minnesota
Author:
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Total Pages: 48
Release: 2018
Genre: AIDS (Disease)
ISBN:

The Minnesota HIV Strategy provides a roadmap for coordinating efforts and resources to address HIV and move towards eliminating HIV/AIDS in Minnesota.

HIV Exceptionalism

HIV Exceptionalism
Author: Adia Benton
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 205
Release: 2015-02-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1452943850

WINNER, 2017 RACHEL CARSON PRIZE, SOCIETY FOR THE SOCIAL STUDIES OF SCIENCE In 2002, Sierra Leone emerged from a decadelong civil war. Seeking international attention and development aid, its government faced a dilemma. Though devastated by conflict, Sierra Leone had a low prevalence of HIV. However, like most African countries, it stood to benefit from a large influx of foreign funds specifically targeted at HIV/AIDS prevention and care. What Adia Benton chronicles in this ethnographically rich and often moving book is how one war-ravaged nation reoriented itself as a country suffering from HIV at the expense of other, more pressing health concerns. During her fieldwork in the capital, Freetown, a city of one million people, at least thirty NGOs administered internationally funded programs that included HIV/AIDS prevention and care. Benton probes why HIV exceptionalism—the idea that HIV is an exceptional disease requiring an exceptional response—continues to guide approaches to the epidemic worldwide and especially in Africa, even in low-prevalence settings. In the fourth decade since the emergence of HIV/AIDS, many today are questioning whether the effort and money spent on this health crisis has in fact helped or exacerbated the problem. HIV Exceptionalism does this and more, asking, what are the unanticipated consequences that HIV/AIDS development programs engender?