HIV/AIDS and the social consequences of untamed biomedicine : anthropological complicities / Graham Fordham.
Material type: TextSeries: Routledge studies in anthropology ; 18 | Routledge studies in anthropology ; 18.Description: xvi, 384 pages ; 24 cmISBN:- 9781138797222 (hardback)
- 1138797227 (hardback)
- 614.599392009593 23
- RA643.86.T5 F668 2015
- WC 503.4 JT3
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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E-Book | Reformational Study Centre General library | 614.599392009593 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available |
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 303-376) and index.
"Drawing on the case of HIV/AIDS in Thailand, this book examines how anthropological and other interpretative social science research has been utilized in modeling the AIDS epidemic, and in the design and implementation of interventions. It argues that much social science research has been complicit with the forces that generated the epidemic and with the social control agendas of the state, and that as such it has increased the weight of structural violence bearing upon the afflicted.The book also questions claims of Thai AIDS control success, arguing that these can only be made at the cost of excluding categories such as intravenous drug users, the incarcerated, and homosexuals, who continue to experience extraordinarily high levels of levels of HIV infection. Considered deviant and undeserving, these persons have deliberately been excluded from harm reduction programs. Overall, this work argues for the untapped potential of anthropological research in the health field, a confident anthropology rooted in ethnography and a critical reflexivity. Crucially, it argues that in context of interdisciplinary collaborations, anthropological research must refuse relegation to the status of an adjunct discipline, and must be free epistemologically and methodologically from the universalizing assumptions and practices of biomedicine"--