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HIV/Aids

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Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2016) 115 (1): 33–59.
Published: 01 January 2016
...Dinah Rajak This article focuses on HIV/AIDS management at Anglo American, the world's third-biggest mining company, the largest private-sector employer in South Africa and across the continent, and the first company to provide antiretroviral therapy (ART) “free of charge” to its workforce...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2004) 103 (4): 769–811.
Published: 01 October 2004
...Adam Sitze 2004 by Duke University Press 2004 Adam Sitze Denialism Perhaps the most coherent expression of Presi- dent Thabo Mbeki’s position on the relation- ship between HIV, AIDS, and antiretroviral...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2014) 113 (3): 443–446.
Published: 01 July 2014
... Science and the Global Dynamics of Knowledge . Cambridge, UK : Polity Press . Fanon Frantz . 1967 . Black Skin, White Masks . New York : Grove Press . Fleury-Steiner Benjamin Crowder Carla . 2008 . Dying Inside: The HIV/AIDS Ward at Limestone Prison . Ann Arbor : University...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2008) 107 (2): 265–285.
Published: 01 April 2008
...-centered notions of sovereign power. By doing so, it reopens, in a way not subject to liberalism’s constraints, the question of sexual freedom. As gay men near the end of the third decade of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, what, if anything, is left of the liberal notion of sexual freedom...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2018) 117 (2): 410–419.
Published: 01 April 2018
... day laborers at an informal hiring site in City of Industry, California, were waiting to receive health screening from a mobile clinic provided by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. The mid-1990s were the height of the HIV-AIDS epidemic in the United States and the department...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1989) 88 (1): 301–317.
Published: 01 January 1989
... that will seem more literal, or as students of rhetoric would say, more proper. According to current scientific understanding, and I hasten to add that it is not my intention nec­ essarily to endorse or validate that understanding, AIDS results from infection with some quantity of HIV or Human Immunodeficiency...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2016) 115 (1): 1–7.
Published: 01 January 2016
..., to cal- culate the actuarial relationship of profit and loss in the face of South Africa’s HIV/AIDS epidemic (see Rajak this issue). Finally, redounding on questions of welfare, conventionally understood, that is, in the provision of public hous- ing, what might be discerned about the relationship...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2009) 108 (3): 459–481.
Published: 01 July 2009
... and the sector of society most at risk for HIV/ AIDS. (When NewsHour’s Gwen Ifill moderated the 2004 vice presidential debates, she posed questions about black women and HIV/AIDS to both Vice President Dick Cheney and Senator John Edwards; both candidates were ill-informed on the issue.)32...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2024) 123 (1): 79–103.
Published: 01 January 2024
... individuality” fostered by 1990s discourses of economic liberalization (Bhaskaran 2004 ), in the novel subjectivities such as MsM (men who have sex with men), kothi, and panthi that proliferate in the interstices of HIV/AIDS funding and governmentality (khanna 2016 ), in the role of class- and caste...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2015) 114 (2): 436–445.
Published: 01 April 2015
..., and then beyond it—protests among locally organized groups of people over issues ranging from improved health care and treatment for people living with HIV/AIDS to changes in education policy, land redistribu- tion policies, and free access to basic services like water and electricity. From 1998...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2010) 109 (2): 357–368.
Published: 01 April 2010
... that the benefits of our current forms of globalization do not accrue only to a small minority while the vast majority experience the pain and dislocation of our economic and environmental crises. Coalitions are central to mobilization around HIV/AIDS and climate change, for these issues do...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2011) 110 (1): 101–119.
Published: 01 January 2011
... of a toxic waste site); the other is living with HIV. The friend who is a very healthy sixty is much the likeliest of us to be living fifteen years from now. I’m thinking, as I write...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2007) 106 (4): 789–804.
Published: 01 October 2007
... uranium from Niger and was on the verge of producing atomic weapons. Presenting bioterrorism as a threat was an effective strategy. Americans’ fears of bioterrorism run deep and represent extensions of historical fears of infectious diseases such as cholera, HIV/AIDS, and malaria.29 Thus...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2006) 105 (1): 37–54.
Published: 01 January 2006
... widespread black poverty and suffering, and scattered protest against the postapartheid state’s social and economic policy, not least for its disastrous ‘‘denialism’’ on HIV/AIDS. In the United States, a large portion of the electorate voted for the son of Bush, protector of ‘‘liberty ‘‘marriage ‘‘life...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2009) 108 (3): 501–517.
Published: 01 July 2009
... people in black communities.17 This has created a situation in which the more powerful and influential segments of these communities can define “the” black agenda on their own terms. As Cohen shows with her careful study of the way that HIV/AIDS remained off the black agenda for so long...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2023) 122 (4): 811–826.
Published: 01 October 2023
...; a century of legalized racial segregation; the dropping of two atomic bombs on civilian populations; the most substantial contribution to global climate change and a mass extinction event; an HIV/AIDS epidemic that killed seven hundred thousand people; a COVID-19 pandemic that has killed over 1 million US...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2007) 106 (3): 625–642.
Published: 01 July 2007
.... A nodal point was the summer of 1996, when news from the Eleventh International AIDS Conference in Vancouver indicated for the first time that for many, HIV could plausibly be treated as a chronic disease through the use of cocktails of newly developed drugs. The brutally abbreviated tem...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2021) 120 (3): 493–514.
Published: 01 July 2021
... and commu- nity care for example, the Black Panther Party s free breakfasts, the help provided to victims of natural disasters, and the care work provided by activ- ists during the HIV/AIDS crisis. As these examples suggest, mutual aid is most common among those unprotected by unions or the state...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2007) 106 (4): 709–726.
Published: 01 October 2007
...., Social Security Transfers, Poverty and Chronic Illness in the Eastern Cape: An Investigation of the Relationship between Social Security Grants, the Alleviation of Rural Poverty and Chronic Illnesses (Including Those Associated with HIV/AIDS)—A Case-Study of Mount Frere...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (2023) 122 (3): 549–565.
Published: 01 July 2023
... as well as academic spaces (Walters 1996 : 844). There remains a need for revisionist histories of US twentieth-century lesbian, queer, and trans pasts that can recover the palliative-care practices and community survival networks that lesbians developed in the HIV/AIDS epidemic and its various wakes...