WORKING PAPER 08/222
Title:
Transnational networks of influence in
South African AIDS treatment activism
Author(s): Eduard Grebe
Date of Publication: July 2008
Price: R 5.00
Abstract
It is often asserted that civil society participation contributes to successful
HIV/AIDS policy formulation and implementation. However, the relationship
between civil society advocacy or activism and the broader societal response is
complex, under-theorised and probably varies significantly between countries.
Any analysis of AIDS activism must therefore employ deeply contextual and
rich empirical description.
One of the world’s most prominent AIDS activist movements, the Treatment
Action Campaign (TAC), emerged in South Africa, where the scale of the
epidemic and the government’s resistance to evidence-based responses (such as
antiretroviral treatment) resulted in the disease becoming highly politicised. The
TAC is widely credited with the dramatic policy turnaround in South Africa.
This study draws on a range of conceptual and theoretical frameworks — among
them the sociology of social movements, the political philosophy of civil society
and the study of ’transnational advocacy networks’ to investigate the TAC’s
operation and the source of its apparent success. It proposes a conception of
transnational networks as ’networks of influence’, including (but not limited to)
the actors normally referred to in transnational advocacy networks. The study
relies on extensive interviews with key TAC leaders, and offers a detailed
account of the TAC’s building and leveraging of networks of influence to affect
HIV/AIDS policy.
These informal but robust networks have been built and maintained largely by a
small group of key individuals within the organisation, and are often (but not
always) built on strong ties of trust (sometimes predating participation in the
TAC). Network participants include AIDS activists (particularly in the US),
local and international scientists, individuals within allied civil society
organisations, members of South Africa’s political elite and individuals within
state institutions. It is concluded that these networks of influence are key to
explaining the TAC’s success.
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