1932

Abstract

Anthropologists working on HIV are increasingly reframing their research as taking place in “the age of treatment,” marking a shift from “the age of AIDS.” The age of treatment is characterized by the increasing biomedicalization of HIV, which has come about as a result of improved pharmaceutical and surveillance technologies and the presumption by international experts in global health that HIV could be eradicated in the near future through biomedical interventions. Despite this radical transformation, I argue that there are many important epistemological continuities for anthropologists researching HIV/AIDS in the twenty-first century. This review identifies such continuities between anthropological research conducted prior to and that conducted since the availability of life-saving treatment for HIV.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102214-014235
2015-10-21
2024-04-18
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

/deliver/fulltext/anthro/44/1/annurev-anthro-102214-014235.html?itemId=/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102214-014235&mimeType=html&fmt=ahah

Literature Cited

  1. Adams A, Moyer E. 2015. Sex is never the same: men's perspectives on refusing circumcision from an in-depth qualitative study in Kwaluseni, Swaziland. Glob. Public Health 10:5–6721–38 [Google Scholar]
  2. Adams V, Pigg SL. 2005. Sex in Development: Science, Sexuality, and Morality in Global Perspective Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press
  3. Aggleton P, Davies P, Hart G. 2005 (1997). AIDS: Activism and Alliances London: Taylor & Francis
  4. Aggleton P, Hart G, Davies P. 1999. Families and Communities Responding to AIDS London: Taylor & Francis
  5. Aggleton P, Parker R. 2010. Routledge Handbook of Sexuality, Health and Rights London: Routledge
  6. Altman D. 1999. Globalization, political economy and HIV/AIDS. Theory Soc. 28:4559–84 [Google Scholar]
  7. Angotti NA, Bula L, Gaydosh E, Kimchi EZ, Thornton RL, Yeatman SE. 2009. Increasing the acceptability of HIV counseling and testing with three C's: convenience, confidentiality and credibility. Soc. Sci. Med. 68:122263–70 [Google Scholar]
  8. Ankrah M. 1995. The impact of HIV/AIDS on the family and other significant relationships: the African clan revisited. AIDS Care 5:15–22 [Google Scholar]
  9. Arnfred S. 2004. Re-Thinking Sexualities in Africa Uppsala, Swed.: Nordic Afr. Inst.
  10. Ashforth A. 2002. An epidemic of witchcraft? The implication of AIDS for the post-apartheid state. Afr. Stud. 61:1121–43 [Google Scholar]
  11. Becker F, Geissler PW. 2009. AIDS and Religious Practice in Africa Leiden, The Neth.: Brill
  12. Bell K. 2015. HIV prevention: making male circumcision the ‘right’ tool for the job. Glob. Public Health 10:5–6552–72 [Google Scholar]
  13. Biehl J. 2007. Will to Live: AIDS Therapies and the Politics of Survival Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press
  14. Boellstorff T. 2011. But do not identify as gay: a proleptic genealogy of the MSM category. Cult. Anthropol. 26:2287–312 [Google Scholar]
  15. Bolton R. 1989. The AIDS Pandemic: A Global Emergency New York: Gordon & Breach
  16. Bolton R. 1992a. AIDS and promiscuity: muddles in the models of HIV prevention. Med. Anthropol. 14:2–4145–223 [Google Scholar]
  17. Bolton R. 1992b. Mapping terra incognita: sex research for AIDS prevention—an urgent model for the 1990s. The Time of AIDS: Social Analysis, Theory and Method G Herdt, S Lindenbaum Newbury Park, CA: Sage [Google Scholar]
  18. Both R, Etsub E, Moyer E. 2013. ‘They were about to take out their guns on us’: accessing hard-to-reach Afar communities in Ethiopia. Cult. Health Sex. 15:Suppl. 3S338–50 [Google Scholar]
  19. Burchardt M, Patterson AS, Rasmussen LM. 2013. The politics and anti-politics of social movements: religion and HIV/AIDS in Africa. Can. J. Afr. Stud. 47:2171–85 [Google Scholar]
  20. Butt L, Eves R. 2008. Making Sense of AIDS: Culture, Sexuality and Power in Melanesia Honolulu: Univ. Hawaii Press
  21. Castro A, Farmer P. 2005. Understanding and addressing AIDS-related stigma: from anthropological theory to clinical practice in Haiti. Am. J. Public Health 95:153–59 [Google Scholar]
  22. Colvin C, Robins S, Leavens J. 2010. Grounding “responsibilisation talk”: masculinities, citizenship and HIV in Cape Town, South Africa. J. Dev. Stud. 46:71179–95 [Google Scholar]
  23. Comaroff J. 2007. Beyond bare life: AIDS, (bio)politics, and the neoliberal order. Public Cult. 19:1197–219 [Google Scholar]
  24. Dapaah J, Moyer E. 2013. Dilemmas of patient expertise: people living with HIV as peer educators in a Ghanaian hospital. Ghana Stud. 2013:14–15195–222 [Google Scholar]
  25. Davies M. 1997. Shattered assumptions: time and the experience of long-term HIV positivity. Soc. Sci. Med. 44:561–71 [Google Scholar]
  26. De Klerk J. 2011. Being Old in Times of AIDS: Ageing, Caring and Relating in Northwest Tanzania Leiden, The Neth.: Afr. Study Cent.
  27. De Klerk J. 2012. The compassion of concealment: silence between older care givers and dying patients in the AIDS era, northwestern Tanzania. Cult. Health Sex. 14:Suppl. 1S27–38 [Google Scholar]
  28. De Waal A. 2006. AIDS and Power: Why There is No Political Crisis—Yet London: Zed Books
  29. Decoteau CL. 2013. Ancestors and Antiretrovirals: The Biopolitics of HIV/AIDS in Post-Apartheid South Africa Chicago: Univ. Chicago Press
  30. Desclaux A, Ciss M, Taverne B, Sow PS, Egrot M. et al. 2003. Access to antiretroviral drugs and AIDS management in Senegal. AIDS 17:S95–101 [Google Scholar]
  31. Dilger H. 2006. The power of AIDS: kinship, mobility and the value of social and ritual relationships in Tanzania. Afr. J. AIDS Res. 5:2109–21 [Google Scholar]
  32. Dilger H. 2008. “We are all going to die”: kinship, belonging, and the morality of HIV/AIDS-related illnesses and deaths in rural Tanzania. Anthropol. Q. 81:1207–32 [Google Scholar]
  33. Dilger H-J, Luig U. 2010. Morality, Hope and Grief: Anthropologies of AIDS in Africa New York/Oxford: Berghahn Books
  34. Doyal L, Doyal L. 2013. Living with HIV and Dying with AIDS: Diversity, Inequality and Human Rights in the Global Pandemic Farnham, Surrey, UK: Ashgate
  35. Engelmann L, Kehr J. 2015. Double trouble? Towards an epistemology of co-infection. Med. Anthropol. Theory 2:11–31 [Google Scholar]
  36. Epstein S. 1996. Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of Knowledge Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  37. Ezzy D. 1998. Lived experience and interpretation in narrative theory: experiences of living with HIV/AIDS. Qual. Sociol. 21:169–79 [Google Scholar]
  38. Farmer P. 1992. AIDS and Accusation: Haiti and the Geography of Blame. Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  39. Farmer P. 1999. Infections and Inequalities: The Modern Plagues Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  40. Farmer P. 2003. Pathologies of Power: Health, Human Rights and the New War on the Poor Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  41. Farmer P, Connors M, Simmons J. 1996. Women, Poverty and AIDS: Sex, Drugs and Sexual Violence Boston: Common Courage Press
  42. Farmer P, Léandre F, Mukherjee JS, Sidonise CM, Nevil P. et al. 2001. Community-based approaches to HIV treatment in resource-poor settings. Lancet 358:404–9 [Google Scholar]
  43. Fassin D. 2007. When Bodies Remember: Experiences and Politics of AIDS in South Africa Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  44. Fee E, Fox DM. 1988. AIDS: The Burdens of History Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  45. Feldman D. 1985. AIDS and social change. Hum. Organ. 44:4343–48 [Google Scholar]
  46. Feldman D. 1986. Anthropology, AIDS and Africa. Med. Anthropol. Q. 17:238–40 [Google Scholar]
  47. Foucault M. 1978. The History of Sexuality: I An Introduction New York: Pantheon Books
  48. Geissler PW, Prince RJ. 2010. The Land Is Dying: Contingency, Creativity and Conflict in Western Kenya Oxford, UK: Berghahn
  49. Gould DB. 2009. Moving Politics: Emotions and ACT UP's Fight Against AIDS Chicago: Univ. Chicago Press
  50. Green G, Sobo EJ. 2000. The Endangered Self: Managing the Social Risks of HIV London: Routledge
  51. Gutmann M. 2007. Fixing Men: Sex, Birth Control and AIDS in Mexico Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  52. Hardon A. 2012. Biomedical hype and hopes: AIDS medicines for Africa. Rethinking Biomedicine and Governance in Africa: Contributions from Anthropology PW Geissler, R Rottenburg, J Zenker 77–96 Bielefeld, Ger.: Transcript Verlag [Google Scholar]
  53. Hardon A, Moyer E. 2014. Medical technologies: flows and frictions of new socialites. Anthropol. Med. 21:2107–12 [Google Scholar]
  54. Hardon AP, Dilger H. 2011. Global AIDS medicines in East African health institutions. Med. Anthropol. 30:2136–57 [Google Scholar]
  55. Hardon AP, Posel D. 2012. Editorial introduction: Secrecy as embodied practice: beyond the confessional imperative. Cult. Health Sex. 14:Suppl. 1S1–13 [Google Scholar]
  56. Henderson PC. 2011. AIDS, Intimacy and Care in Rural KwaZulu-Natal Amsterdam: Univ. Amst. Press
  57. Herdt G. 1987. AIDS and anthropology. Anthropol. Today 3:21–3 [Google Scholar]
  58. Herdt G, Boxer A. 1991. Ethnographic issues in the study of AIDS. J. Sex Res. 28:2171–87 [Google Scholar]
  59. Herdt G, Leap WL, Sovine M. 1991. Introduction: Anthropology, theory and method. J. Sex Res. 28:167–69 [Google Scholar]
  60. Hirsch JS. 2007. The inevitability of infidelity: sexual reputation, social geographies and marital HIV risk in rural Mexico. Am. J. Public Health 97:6986–96 [Google Scholar]
  61. Hirsch JS, Wardlow H, Smith DJ, Phinney HM, Parokj S, Nathanson CA. 2009. The Secret: Love, Marriage and HIV Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt Univ. Press
  62. Hutchinson JF. 2001. The biology and evolution of HIV. Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 30:85–108 [Google Scholar]
  63. Igonya E, Moyer E. 2013. Putting sex on the table: sex, sexuality, and masculinity among HIV positive men in Nairobi, Kenya. Cult. Health Sex. 15:Suppl. 4S567–80 [Google Scholar]
  64. Iliffe J. 2006. The African AIDS Epidemic: A History Oxford, UK: James Currey
  65. Jewkes R, Morrell R. 2010. Gender and sexuality: emerging perspectives from the heterosexual epidemic in South Africa and implication for HIV risk and prevention. J. Int. AIDS Soc. 13:6 [Google Scholar]
  66. Kalofonos IA. 2010. “All I eat is ARVs”: the paradox of AIDS treatment interventions in central Mozambique. Med. Anthropol. Q. 24:3363–80 [Google Scholar]
  67. Kane S. 1990. AIDS, addiction, and condom use: sources of sexual risk for heterosexual women. J. Sex Res. 27:3427–44 [Google Scholar]
  68. Kane S. 1991. Heterosexuals, AIDS, and the heroin subculture. Soc. Sci. Med. 32:91037–50 [Google Scholar]
  69. Kane S, Mason T. 2001. AIDS and criminal justice. Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 30:457–79 [Google Scholar]
  70. Kenworthy N. 2014. A manufactu(RED) ethics: labor, HIV and the body in Lesotho's “sweat-free” garment industry. Med. Anthropol. Q. 28:4459–79 [Google Scholar]
  71. Kielmann K, Cataldo F. 2010. Tracking the rise of the “expert patient” in evolving paradigms of HIV care. AIDS Care 22:Suppl. 121–28 [Google Scholar]
  72. Kim JY, Millen JV, Irwin A, Gershman J. 2000. Dying for Growth: Global Inequality and the Health of the Poor Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press
  73. Kinsman J. 2010. AIDS Policy in Uganda: Evidence, Ideology and the Making of an African Success Story London: Palgrave Macmillan
  74. Kippax S. 2012. Effective HIV prevention: the indispensable role of social science. J. AIDS 15:17357 [Google Scholar]
  75. Kyakuwa M. 2010. More hands in complex ART delivery? Experiences from the expert clients initiative in rural Uganda. Afr. Soc. Ref. 13:1143–67 [Google Scholar]
  76. Kyakuwa M, Hardon A. 2012. Concealment tactics among HIV-positive nurses in Uganda. Cult. Health Sex 14:Suppl. 1S123–33 [Google Scholar]
  77. Kyakuwa M, Hardon A, Goldstein Z. 2012. “The adopted children of ART”: expert clients and role tensions in ART provision in Uganda. Med. Anthropol. 31:2149–61 [Google Scholar]
  78. Le Marcis F. 2012. Struggling with AIDS in South Africa: the space of the everyday as a field of recognition. Med. Anthropol. Q. 26:4486–502 [Google Scholar]
  79. Lepani K. 2012. Islands of Love, Islands of Risk: Culture and HIV in the Trobriands Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt Univ. Press
  80. Livingston J. 2012. Improvising Medicine: An African Oncology Ward in an Emerging Cancer Epidemic Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press
  81. MacQueen KM. 1994. The epidemiology of HIV transmission: trends, structure and dynamics. Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 23:509–26 [Google Scholar]
  82. Marcus G. 1995. Ethnography in/of the world system: the emergence of multi-sited ethnography. Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 24:95–117 [Google Scholar]
  83. Marsland R, Prince R. 2012. What is a life worth? Exploring biomedical interventions, survival and the politics of life. Med. Anthropol. Q. 26:4453–69 [Google Scholar]
  84. Martin E. 1995. Flexible Bodies: The Role of Immunity in American Culture from the Days of Polio to the Age of AIDS Boston: Beacon
  85. Massad J. 2002. Re-orienting desire: the gay international. Public Cult. 14:2361–85 [Google Scholar]
  86. Mattes D. 2011. “We are just supposed to be quiet”: the production of adherence to antiretroviral treatment in urban Tanzania. Med. Anthropol. 30:2158–82 [Google Scholar]
  87. Mattes D. 2012. “I am also a human being!” Antiretroviral treatment in local moral worlds. Anthropol. Med. 19:175–84 [Google Scholar]
  88. McGrath JW, Rwabukwali CB, Schumann DA, Pearson-Marks J, Nakayiwa S. et al. 1993. Anthropology and AIDS: the cultural context of sexual risk behavior among urban Baganda women in Kampala, Uganda. Soc. Sci. Med. 36:4429–39 [Google Scholar]
  89. McGrath JW, Schumann DA, Pearson-Marks J. 1992. Cultural determinants of sexual risk behavior for AIDS among Baganda women. Med. Anthropol. Q. 6:2153–61 [Google Scholar]
  90. McGrath JW, Winchester MS, Kaawa-Mafigiri D, Walakira E, Namutiibwa F. et al. 2014. Challenging the paradigm: anthropological perspectives on HIV as a chronic disease. Med. Anthropol. 33:4303–17 [Google Scholar]
  91. Meinart L, Mogenson HO, Twebaze J. 2009. Tests for life chances: CD4 miracles and obstacles in Uganda. Anthropol. Med. 16:2195–209 [Google Scholar]
  92. Molyneux S, Geissler PW. 2008. Ethics and the ethnography of medical research in Africa. Soc. Sci. Med. 67:5685–95 [Google Scholar]
  93. Montgomery C. 2012. Making prevention public: the co-production of gender and knowledge in HIV prevention research. Soc. Stud. Sci. 42:6922–44 [Google Scholar]
  94. Moyer E. 2012. Faidha Gani? What's the point: HIV and the logics of (non)-disclosure among young activists in Zanzibar. Cult. Health Sex. 14:Suppl. 167–79 [Google Scholar]
  95. Moyer E. 2014. Peer mentors, mobile phone and pills: collective monitoring and adherence in Kenyatta National Hospital's HIV treatment programme. Anthropol Med. 21:2149–61 [Google Scholar]
  96. Moyer E, Burchardt M, Van Dijk R. 2013a. Editorial introduction: Sexuality, intimacy and counselling: perspectives from Africa. Cult. Health Sex. 15:4S429–30 [Google Scholar]
  97. Moyer E, Hardon A. 2014. A disease unlike any other? Why HIV remains exceptional in the age of treatment. Med. Anthropol. 33:4263–69 [Google Scholar]
  98. Moyer E, Igonya EK. 2014. When families fail: shifting expectations of care among people living with HIV in Nairobi, Kenya. Anthropol. Med. 21:2136–48 [Google Scholar]
  99. Moyer E, Igonya EK, Both R, Cherutich P, Hardon A. 2013b. The duty to disclose in Kenyan health facilities: a qualitative investigation of HIV disclosure in everyday practice. SAHARA-J. 10:Suppl. 1S60–72 [Google Scholar]
  100. Ndjio B. 2012. Post-colonial histories of sexuality: the political intervention of a libidinal African straight. Africa 82:4609–31 [Google Scholar]
  101. Nguyen V-K. 2005. Antiretroviral globalism, biopolitics, and therapeutic citizenship. See Ong & Collier 124–44
  102. Nguyen V-K. 2010. The Republic of Therapy: Triage and Sovereignty in West Africa's Time of AIDS Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press
  103. Nguyen V-K, Bajos N, Dubois-Arber F, O'Malley J, Pirkle CM. 2011. Remedicalizing an epidemic: from HIV treatment as prevention to HIV treatment as prevention. AIDS 25:3291–93 [Google Scholar]
  104. Nguyen V-K, Grennan T, Peschard K, Tan D, Tendrebeogo I. 2003. Antiretroviral use in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. AIDS 17:S109–11 [Google Scholar]
  105. Obbo C. 1993. HIV transmission through social and geographic networks in Uganda. Soc. Sci. Med. 36:7949–55 [Google Scholar]
  106. Ong A, Collier SJ. 2005. Global Assemblages: Technology, Politics and Ethics as Anthropological Problems Malden, MA: Blackwell
  107. Parikh S. 2007. The political economy of marriage and HIV: the ABC approach, safe infidelity and managing moral risk in Uganda. Am. J. Public Health 97:61198–208 [Google Scholar]
  108. Parker R. 1987. Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in Brazil. Med. Anthropol. Q. 1:2155–75 [Google Scholar]
  109. Parker R. 1991. Bodies, Pleasures, and Passions: Sexual Culture in Contemporary Brazil Boston: Beacon
  110. Parker R. 1995. The social and cultural construction of sexual risk, or how to have (sex) research in an epidemic. Culture and Sexual Risk: Anthropological Perspectives on AIDS H ten Brummelhuis, G Herdt 257–69 Amsterdam: Gordon & Breach [Google Scholar]
  111. Parker R. 2001. Sexuality, culture and power in HIV/AIDS research. Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 30:163–79 [Google Scholar]
  112. Parker R. 2002. The global HIV/AIDS pandemic, structural inequalities, and the politics of international health. Am. J. Public Health 92:3343–47 [Google Scholar]
  113. Parker R, Aggleton P. 2003. HIV and AIDS-related stigma and discrimination: a conceptual framework and implications for action. Soc. Sci. Med. 57:113–24 [Google Scholar]
  114. Parker R, Carballo M. 1990. Qualitative research on gay and bisexual behavior relevant to HIV/AIDS. J. Sex Res. 27:497–525 [Google Scholar]
  115. Parker R, Herdt G, Carballo M. 1991. Sexual culture, HIV transmission and AIDS research. J. Sex Res. 28:77–98 [Google Scholar]
  116. Patton C. 1985. Sex and Germs: The Politics of AIDS Boston: South End Press
  117. Patton C. 1990. Inventing AIDS New York: Routledge
  118. Patton C. 2002. Globalizing AIDS Minneapolis: Univ. Minn. Press
  119. Pfeiffer J. 2004. Condom social marketing, Pentecostalism and structural adjustment in Mozambique: a clash of AIDS prevention messages. Med. Anthropol. Q. 18:177–103 [Google Scholar]
  120. Pfeiffer J. 2013. The struggle for a public sector: PEPFAR in Mozambique. When People Come First: Critical Studies in Global Health J Biehl, A Petryna 166–81 Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press [Google Scholar]
  121. Posel D. 2005. Sex, death and the fate of the nation: reflection on the politicization of sexuality in post-Apartheid South Africa. Africa 75:2125–53 [Google Scholar]
  122. Rasmussen LM. 2013. Counselling clients to follow ‘the rules’ of safe sex and ARV treatment. Cult. Health Sex. 15:Suppl. 4S537–52 [Google Scholar]
  123. Reid G. 2010. Gossip, rumour and scandal: the circulation of AIDS narratives in a climate of silence and secrecy. See Dilger & Luig 2010 192–217
  124. Reynolds L, Cousins T, Newell M-L, Imrie J. 2013. The social dynamics of consent and refusal in HIV surveillance in rural South Africa. Soc. Sci. Med. 77:118–25 [Google Scholar]
  125. Richey LA. 2012. Counselling citizens and producing patronage: AIDS treatment in South African and Ugandan clinics. Dev. Change 43:4823–45 [Google Scholar]
  126. Robins SL. 2008. From Revolution to Rights in South Africa: Social Movements, NGOs & Popular Politics After Apartheid Suffolk, UK: James Currey
  127. Rose N, Novas C. 2005. Biological citizenship. See Ong & Collier 2005 439–63
  128. Rosengarten M. 2009. HIV Interventions: Biomedicine and the Traffic Between Information and Flesh Seattle: Univ. Wash. Press
  129. Rosengarten M, Michael M. 2009. The performative function of expectations translating treatment to prevention: the case of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP. Soc. Sci. Med. 69:1049–55 [Google Scholar]
  130. Russell S, Seeley J. 2010. The transition of living with HIV as a chronic condition in rural Uganda: working to create order and control when on antiretroviral therapy. Soc. Sci. Med. 70:375–82 [Google Scholar]
  131. Sabatier R. 1988. Blaming Others: Prejudice, Race and Worldwide AIDS Philadelphia: New Soc.
  132. Schoepf BG. 1988. Women, AIDS, and economic crisis in Central Africa. Can. J. Afr. Stud. 22:3625–44 [Google Scholar]
  133. Schoepf BG. 2001. International AIDS research in anthropology: taking a critical perspective on the crisis. Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 30:335–61 [Google Scholar]
  134. Seeley J. 2014. HIV and East Africa: Thirty Years in the Shadow of an Epidemic London: Routledge
  135. Seeley J, Kajura E, Bachengana M, Okongo M, Wagner U, Mulder D. 1993. The extended family and support for people with AIDS in a rural population in rural south west Uganda: a safety net with holes?. AIDS Care 5:1117–22 [Google Scholar]
  136. Seeley J, Russell S. 2010. Social rebirth and social transformation? Rebuilding social lives after ART in rural Uganda. AIDS Care 22:44–50 [Google Scholar]
  137. Seeley J, Wolff B, Kabunga E, Tumwekwase G, Grosskurth H. 2009. “This is where we buried our sons”: people of advance old age coping with the impact of the AIDS epidemic in a resource-poor setting in rural Uganda. Age. Soc. 29:115–34 [Google Scholar]
  138. Setel P. 1999. A Plague of Paradoxes: AIDS, Culture and Demography in Northern Tanzania Chicago: Univ. Chicago Press
  139. Simbaya J, Moyer E. 2013. The emergence and evolution of HIV counselling in Zambia: a 25-year history. Cult. Health Sex. 15:Suppl. 4S453–66 [Google Scholar]
  140. Simpson A. 2009. Boys to Men in the Shadow of AIDS: Masculinities and HIV Risk in Zambia New York: Palgrave Macmillan
  141. Singer M. 1999. Anthropology and the politics of AIDS fatigue. Anthropol. Newsl. 40:358 [Google Scholar]
  142. Singer M. 2001. Ethnography, please!. AIDS Anthropol. Bull. 13:12 [Google Scholar]
  143. Singer M. 2011. Toward a critical biosocial model of ecohealth in southern Africa: the HIV/AIDS and nutrition insecurity syndemic. Ann. Anthropol. Pract. 35:18–27 [Google Scholar]
  144. Singer M, Flores C, Davidson L, Burke G, Castillo Z. et al. 1990. The economic, social and cultural context of AIDS among Latinos. Med. Anthropol. Q. 4:172–114 [Google Scholar]
  145. Singer M, Irizzary R, Schensul J. 1991. Needle access as an AIDS prevention strategy for IV drug users: a research perspective. Hum. Organ. 50:2142–53 [Google Scholar]
  146. Smith DJ. 2007. Modern marriage, men's extramarital sex, and HIV risk in southeastern Nigeria. Am. J. Public Health 97:6997–1005 [Google Scholar]
  147. Smith DJ. 2014. AIDS Doesn't Show Its Face: Inequality, Morality, and Social Change in Nigeria Chicago: Univ. Chicago Press
  148. Smith DJ, Mbakwem BC. 2010. Antiretroviral therapy and reproductive life projects: mitigating the stigma of AIDS in Nigeria. Soc. Sci. Med. 71:2345–52 [Google Scholar]
  149. Sobo EJ. 1995. Finance, romance, social support and condom use among impoverished inner city women. Hum. Organ. 54:2115–28 [Google Scholar]
  150. Sobo EJ. 1999. Editorial: Cultural models and HIV/AIDS: new anthropological views. Anthropol. Med. 6:15–12 [Google Scholar]
  151. Sontag S. 1989. AIDS and Its Metaphors New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux
  152. Strathern M. 2000. Audit Cultures: Anthropological Studies in Accountability, Ethics and the Academy London: Routledge
  153. Susser I. 2009. AIDS, Sex and Culture: Global Politics and Survival in Southern Africa. New York: Wiley
  154. Talle A. 1995. Bar workers at the border. Young People at Risk: Fighting AIDS in Northern Tanzania K-I Klepp, PM Biswalo, A Talle 18–30 Oslo: Scand. Univ. Press [Google Scholar]
  155. Taylor J. 2007. Assisting or compromising intervention: the concept of “culture” in biomedical and social research on HIV/AIDS. Soc. Sci. Med. 64:965–75 [Google Scholar]
  156. Thomas F, Haour-Knipe M, Aggleton P. 2010. Mobility, Sexuality and AIDS London: Taylor & Francis
  157. Thornton RJ. 2008. Unimagined Community: Sex, Networks, and AIDS in Uganda and South Africa Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  158. Thurshen M. 1996. The political ecology of AIDS in Africa. The Political Economy of AIDS M Singer 167–82 Amityville, NY: Baywood [Google Scholar]
  159. Treichler PA. 1987. AIDS, homophobia, and biomedical discourse: an epidemic of signification. Cult. Stud. 1:3263–305 [Google Scholar]
  160. Treichler PA. 1999. How to Have Theory in an Epidemic: Cultural Chronicles of AIDS Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press
  161. Van Dijk R, Dilger H, Burchardt M, Rasing T. 2014. Religion and AIDS Treatment in Africa: Saving Souls, Prolonging Lives Farnham, Surrey, UK: Ashgate
  162. Verheijen J. 2011. Complexities of the ‘transactional sex’ model: non-providing men, self-providing women, and HIV risk and rural Malawi. Ann. Anthropol. Pract. 35:116–31 [Google Scholar]
  163. Vernooij E, Hardon AP. 2013. “What mother wouldn't want to save her baby?” HIV testing and counselling practices in a rural Ugandan antenatal clinic. Cult. Health Sex. 15:Suppl. 4S553–66 [Google Scholar]
  164. Wardlow H. 2007. Men's extramarital sexuality in rural Papua New Guinea. Am. J. Public Health 97:61006–14 [Google Scholar]
  165. Whyte SR. 1997. Questioning Misfortune: The Pragmatics of Uncertainty in Eastern Uganda Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press
  166. Whyte SR. 2005. Going home? Burial and belonging in the era of AIDS. Africa 75:2154–72 [Google Scholar]
  167. Whyte SR. 2009. Health identities and subjectivities: the ethnographic challenge. Med. Anthropol. Q. 23:16–15 [Google Scholar]
  168. Whyte SR. 2014. Second Chances: Surviving AIDS in Uganda Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press
  169. Whyte SR, Whyte MA, Kyaddondo D. 2010. Health workers entangled: confidentiality and certification. See Dilger & Luig 2010 80–101
  170. Whyte SR, Whyte MA, Meinert L, Kyaddondo B. 2004. Treating AIDS: dilemmas of unequal access in Uganda. SAHARA-J 1:14–26 [Google Scholar]
  171. Zigon J. 2011. HIV Is God's Blessing: Rehabilitating Morality in Neoliberal Russia Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102214-014235
Loading
  • Article Type: Review Article
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error