Meeting the challenges of HIV/AIDS in Southeast and East Asia
Date
2005
Authors
Piper, Nicola
Yeoh, Brenda S A
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Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Out of a total of 38 million people living with HIV/AIDS globally today, the Asia-Pacific is home to about 7.4 million - a figure which constitutes a sharp rise to previous years. In absolute numbers, infections in Asia are projected to exceed African figures within a decade. This has largely to do with economic changes towards market-based capitalism, widening socioeconomic disparities and increased levels of mobility (internal and cross-border), as for instance in China and Indonesia. Overall, the epidemic in Asia has been described as more complex than in Africa involving a multiplicity of transmission modes. The case studies presented in the contributions to this special issue discuss the connections between issues of mobility, gender, (trans)nationalism and sexuality in understanding the HIV/AIDS challenge in the region. The various ways in meeting the challenges of HIV/AIDS in Southeast and East Asia areanalysed, whereby non-governmental and community-based responses often emerge as more effective than state interventions.
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Keywords
Keywords: acquired immune deficiency syndrome; disease prevalence; epidemic; human immunodeficiency virus; Asia; Eastern Hemisphere; Eurasia; Far East; Southeast Asia; World Asia-Pacific; Governmental; Human rights; Non-governmental and community-based responses; Regional network
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Source
Asia Pacific Viewpoint
Type
Journal article
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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