Resilience and Contagion: Invoking Human Rights in African HIV Advocacy
HIV represents not only an unprecedented pandemic but also a site of civil society innovation. In the midst of devastation, activists in sub-Saharan Africa are progressing from traditional forms of advocacy to strategies that engage human rights principles, techniques, and language. Employing a comparative case-study approach, Resilience and Contagion considers the efforts of nine local civil society organizations in Ghana, Uganda, South Africa, and Botswana. Kristi Heather Kenyon examines who adopts rights-based discourse and why, arguing that leadership, individual beliefs, and structure all play a critical role in framing organizations. Beyond changing laws or policies, the most important impact of promoting patients’ rights, she attests, is that it enables individuals living with HIV to interact with health services from a position of resilience, strength, and empowerment. This book delves into discourse at the juncture of human rights, social theory, and global health, prompting significant and relevant discussion on advocacy’s evolution in the region of the world hit hardest by the HIV pandemic. Drawing on 145 interviews, extensive participant observation, and fascinating document analysis, Resilience and Contagion foregrounds the voices of civil society actors who have conducted the most vocal, widespread, and innovative advocacy to date.
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Resilience and Contagion: Invoking Human Rights in African HIV Advocacy
HIV represents not only an unprecedented pandemic but also a site of civil society innovation. In the midst of devastation, activists in sub-Saharan Africa are progressing from traditional forms of advocacy to strategies that engage human rights principles, techniques, and language. Employing a comparative case-study approach, Resilience and Contagion considers the efforts of nine local civil society organizations in Ghana, Uganda, South Africa, and Botswana. Kristi Heather Kenyon examines who adopts rights-based discourse and why, arguing that leadership, individual beliefs, and structure all play a critical role in framing organizations. Beyond changing laws or policies, the most important impact of promoting patients’ rights, she attests, is that it enables individuals living with HIV to interact with health services from a position of resilience, strength, and empowerment. This book delves into discourse at the juncture of human rights, social theory, and global health, prompting significant and relevant discussion on advocacy’s evolution in the region of the world hit hardest by the HIV pandemic. Drawing on 145 interviews, extensive participant observation, and fascinating document analysis, Resilience and Contagion foregrounds the voices of civil society actors who have conducted the most vocal, widespread, and innovative advocacy to date.
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Resilience and Contagion: Invoking Human Rights in African HIV Advocacy

Resilience and Contagion: Invoking Human Rights in African HIV Advocacy

by Kurt Schneider
Resilience and Contagion: Invoking Human Rights in African HIV Advocacy

Resilience and Contagion: Invoking Human Rights in African HIV Advocacy

by Kurt Schneider

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$34.95 

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Overview

HIV represents not only an unprecedented pandemic but also a site of civil society innovation. In the midst of devastation, activists in sub-Saharan Africa are progressing from traditional forms of advocacy to strategies that engage human rights principles, techniques, and language. Employing a comparative case-study approach, Resilience and Contagion considers the efforts of nine local civil society organizations in Ghana, Uganda, South Africa, and Botswana. Kristi Heather Kenyon examines who adopts rights-based discourse and why, arguing that leadership, individual beliefs, and structure all play a critical role in framing organizations. Beyond changing laws or policies, the most important impact of promoting patients’ rights, she attests, is that it enables individuals living with HIV to interact with health services from a position of resilience, strength, and empowerment. This book delves into discourse at the juncture of human rights, social theory, and global health, prompting significant and relevant discussion on advocacy’s evolution in the region of the world hit hardest by the HIV pandemic. Drawing on 145 interviews, extensive participant observation, and fascinating document analysis, Resilience and Contagion foregrounds the voices of civil society actors who have conducted the most vocal, widespread, and innovative advocacy to date.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780773552302
Publisher: MQUP
Publication date: 10/26/2017
Series: McGill-Queen's Studies in Gender, Sexuality, and Social Justice in the Global South , #2
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Kristi Heather Kenyon is assistant professor in the human rights program of the University of Winnipeg’s Global College.

Table of Contents

Tables ix

Acknowledgments xi

Abbreviations xiii

Introduction 3

1 Contagious Discourse: How Rights Spread to Health 11

2 Strength and Resilience: Choosing Rights 49

3 Mixed Messages: Using Rights alongside Other Frames 87

4 Resisting Rights-ification: Avoiding or Limiting Rights 133

5 Drawing Comparisons 172

Conclusions 206

Appendices

A Methods 223

B Primary Sources 233

Notes 291

References 317

Index 353

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