WORKING PAPER 08/220
Title:
Sex, Poverty and HIV
Author(s): Nicoli Nattrass
Date of Publication: July 2008
Price: R 5.00
Abstract
UNAIDS has recently been subject to a series of attacks for supposedly kowtowing
to political correctness by overplaying the risks of generalised HIV
epidemics and failing to concentrate on the risky behaviours of key groups
(notably men who have sex with men, sex workers, and injecting drug users) for
fear of stigmatising them and causing offense (e.g. Chin 2007; Pisani, 2008). It
has also been taken to task for highlighting gender inequality and poverty as
social drivers of the HIV epidemic in Africa rather than facing the challenge of
addressing the multiple concurrent sexual partnerships which really fuel it
(Chin, 2007: 54; Epstein, 2007). UNAIDS officials responded by defending the
institution’s record on prevention and by emphasising that the challenge is to
know the local epidemic and its drivers, and to craft interventions accordingly
(De Lay and De Cock, 2007; De Cock and De Lay, 2008).
This, of course, leaves open the question of the relationship between, and
relative importance of, the social drivers of HIV (notably poverty) and sexual
behaviour. This is especially contentious with regard to Africa. Some stress the
importance of sexual culture (Epstein, 2007) whereas others point to the legacy
of colonial exploitation and structural adjustment in underpinning behavioural
vulnerability to HIV (e.g. Barnett and Whiteside 2002; Fenton 2004; Poku 2005)
and even to a hypothesised biological vulnerability of poor people to HIV
infection (Stillwaggon, 2006). This paper reviews the evidence on poverty,
sexual behaviour and AIDS. It argues that contextual factors within Africa are
more salient than economic factors and that a more nuanced and localised
approach is indeed an appropriate way forward.
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