9780813563732-0813563739-Treating AIDS: Politics of Difference, Paradox of Prevention

Treating AIDS: Politics of Difference, Paradox of Prevention

ISBN-13: 9780813563732
ISBN-10: 0813563739
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Thurka Sangaramoorthy
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Format: Hardcover 192 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780813563732
ISBN-10: 0813563739
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Thurka Sangaramoorthy
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Format: Hardcover 192 pages

Summary

Treating AIDS: Politics of Difference, Paradox of Prevention (ISBN-13: 9780813563732 and ISBN-10: 0813563739), written by authors Thurka Sangaramoorthy, was published by Rutgers University Press in 2014. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other Health Care Delivery (Administration & Medicine Economics, Anthropology, Behavioral Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent Treating AIDS: Politics of Difference, Paradox of Prevention (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Health Care Delivery books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.57.

Description

There is an inherently powerful and complex paradox underlying HIV/AIDS prevention—between the focus on collective advocacy mobilized to combat global HIV/AIDS and the staggeringly disproportionate rates of HIV/AIDS in many places. In Treating AIDS, Thurka Sangaramoorthy examines the everyday practices of HIV/AIDS prevention in the United States from the perspective of AIDS experts and Haitian immigrants in South Florida. Although there is worldwide emphasis on the universality of HIV/AIDS as a social, political, economic, and biomedical problem, developments in HIV/AIDS prevention are rooted in and focused exclusively on disparities in HIV/AIDS morbidity and mortality framed through the rubric of race, ethnicity, and nationality. Everyone is at equal risk for contracting HIV/AIDS, Sangaramoorthy notes, but the ways in which people experience and manage that risk—and the disease itself—is highly dependent on race, ethnic identity, sexuality, gender, immigration status, and other notions of “difference.”

Sangaramoorthy documents in detail the work of AIDS prevention programs and their effect on the health and well-being of Haitians, a transnational community long plagued by the stigma of being stereotyped in public discourse as disease carriers. By tracing the ways in which public knowledge of AIDS prevention science circulates from sites of surveillance and regulation, to various clinics and hospitals, to the social worlds embraced by this immigrant community, she ultimately demonstrates the ways in which AIDS prevention programs help to reinforce categories of individual and collective difference, and how they continue to sustain the persistent and pernicious idea of race and ethnicity as risk factors for the disease.

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