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The Intersection of Human Capital, Gender and HIV/AIDS in the African Context

by Ingelore Welpe (Volume editor) Philip Owino (Volume editor)
©2007 Edited Collection 114 Pages

Summary

The HIV/AIDS pandemic is subject of numerous medical, health and socio-political publications which predominately focus on poverty related issues. Sexuality norms and traditional African gender roles remain tabooed. HIV/AIDS is spreading unhampered along the gender route, erasing Africa’s most valuable resource – young women and young men. Rewarding this silence is the unaffordable loss of human capital which is needed by the sub-Saharan African region for sustainable development. The authors experienced in perennial scientific studies and community projects examine the consequences of the lethal combination of culture, patriarchy, gender norms and the spread of HIV/AIDS. This book challenges the dogma of cultural and gender norms in the HIV/AIDS context in order to advance public debate.

Details

Pages
114
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631540688
Language
English
Keywords
Schwarzafrika AIDS Geschlechterrolle Kongress Traditional African Gender Role Nakuru (2004) Sexuality Norm
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. 113 pp., num. tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Ingelore Welpe (Volume editor) Philip Owino (Volume editor)

The Editors: Ingelore Welpe is a psychologist, anthropologist and author. She is a professor in the Department of Social Work and Health at the University of Applied Sciences Kiel. Her areas of specialisation include: growth and maturity of adolescent girls, women in politics, science and culture, women in business, gender and health and gender and economy. Philip Owino is Director of the HIV/AIDS Control Unit (ACU) and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Biological Sciences at Kenyatta University, Nairobi. His research areas are microbiology/pathology, food production and poverty alleviation, and HIV/AIDS education and policy implementation in the community & universities. He is doing international consultancy work in HIV/AIDS capacity building. In 2005 the author was Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Women’s Research and Gender Studies of the University of Applied Sciences Kiel.

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Title: The Intersection of Human Capital, Gender and HIV/AIDS in the African Context