Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £57.99 GBP
Regular price £60.99 GBP Sale price £57.99 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead

Learning from HIV and AIDS

Holistic overview of what we have learnt about HIV/AIDS, and identifies why so many HIV prevention schemes have failed.

George Ellison (Edited by), Melissa Parker (Edited by), Catherine Campbell (Edited by)

9780521004701, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 30 October 2003

318 pages, 4 b/w illus. 2 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.523 kg

"...a solid and instructive collection of studies from multiple disciplines, ranging from microbiolgoy and genetics to clinical practice to anthropology and political science. This book would make an excellent reader for a survey course on HIV/AIDS or for any group of researchers contemplating putting together an interdisciplinary team to tackle the problem." American Journal of Human Biology

Different professional and academic disciplines have addressed the HIV/AIDS pandemic from a variety of perspectives, using different analytical approaches. By bringing these together in one volume, Learning from HIV/AIDS provides a more complete picture of this multi-faceted disease - from the biological and social factors which facilitate HIV transmission - to the powerful cultural and political forces which fuel the pandemic. Chapters from contributors working on the aetiology, treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS identify how their work has helped predict the spread of HIV and has improved the survival of those infected. Yet interventions to reduce the spread of HIV have had limited success, and few HIV-infected individuals have access to combination drug therapies. Written for students and researchers, and taking an interdisciplinary perspective, this book demonstrates that progress in developing effective and acceptable interventions can only be achieved through collaboration between the biological, medical and social sciences.

1. Introduction: Learning from HIV/AIDS: from multidisciplinary to interdisciplinarity George Ellison, Melissa Parker and Cathy Campbell
2. HIV and the evolution of infectious diseases Janice Hutchinson
3. The epidemiology of HIV/AIDS: contributions to infectious disease epidemiology Azra Ghani and Marie-Claude Boily
4. The influence of HIV/AIDS on demography and demographic research Simon Gregson
5. What have clinicians learnt from working with HIV/AIDS? A medical perspective from London Chris Wood and George Ellison
6. How has the HIV/AIDS pandemic contributed to our understandings of behaviour change and health promotion? Catherine Campbell and Flora Cornish
7. Anthropological reflections on HIV prevention strategies: the case for targeting London's backrooms. Melissa Parker
8. An absence of anthropology: critical reflections on anthropology and AIDS policy and practice in Africa Suzette Heald
9. A disaster with no name: the HIV/AIDS pandemic and the limits of governance Alex de Waal
10. Postscript: Reflections on HIV/AIDS and history Shula Marks.

Subject Areas: Human biology [PSX], Epidemiology & medical statistics [MBNS], Personal & public health [MBNH], Physical anthropology [JHMP], Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC]

View full details