Publication Cover
Reproductive Health Matters
An international journal on sexual and reproductive health and rights
Volume 24, 2016 - Issue 47: Violence: a barrier to sexual and reproductive health and rights
2,830
Views
5
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Other features related to violence

“When the skies fight”: HIV, violence and pathways of precarity in South Africa

Pages 85-95 | Received 19 Nov 2015, Accepted 21 Apr 2016, Published online: 21 May 2016

References

  • M. Gevisser. Thabo Mbeki – The Dream Deferred. 2008; Jonathan Ball Publishers: Cape Town.
  • A.M. Fox. South African AIDS activism and global health politics. Global Public Health. 9(1-2): 2014; 121–123.
  • E. Mills. HIV Illness Meanings and Collaborative Healing Strategies. Social Dynamics. 31(2): 2005; 126–160.
  • P. Gobodo-Madikizela, F. Ross, E. Mills, W.W. Peace. Women’s Contributions to South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission: Women Waging Peace Policy Commission. 2005
  • M.M. De Paoli, A.B. Grønningsœter, E. Mills. HIV/AIDS, the disability grant and ARV adherence. Summary report FAFO. 2010; FAFO: Oslo.
  • E. Mills. ‘You Have to Raise a Fist!’: Seeing and Speaking to the State in South Africa. IDS Bulletin. 47(1): 2016
  • D. Fassin. When Bodies Remember: Experiences and Politics of AIDS in South Africa. 2007; University of California Press: Los Angeles.
  • J. Biehl. Will to Live: AIDS Therapies and the Politics of Survival. 2007; Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • N. Thin. ”Realising the substance of their happiness: How anthropology forgot about Homo gauisus”. Culture and well-being. 2008; 134–155.
  • R. Marsland, R. Prince. What Is Life Worth? Exploring Biomedical Interventions, Survival, and the Politics of Life. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 26(4): 2012; 453–469.
  • J. Galtung. Violence, peace, and peace research. Journal of Peace Research. 6(3): 1969; 167–191.
  • PE Farmer, B Nizeye, S Stulac. Structural violence and clinical medicine. PLoS Medicine. 3(10): 2006; e449.
  • R. Jewkes, R. Morrell. Sexuality and the limits of agency among South African teenage women: Theorising femininities and their connections to HIV risk practises. Social Science & Medicine. 74(11): 2012; 1729–1737.
  • J. Butler. Undoing gender. viii: 2004; Routledge: New York; London. (273 pp.).
  • K. Lalor, E. Mills, A. Sánchez García. Gender, Sexuality and Social Justice: What’s Law Got to Do with It?. 2016
  • J. Butler. Performativity, Precarity and Sexual Politics. 2009; Antropólogos Iberoamericanos en Red (AIBR).
  • J. Butler. Precarious life: the powers of mourning and violence. xxi: 2004; Verso: London; New York. (168 pp.).
  • J. Biehl. The Activist State: Global pharmaceuticals, AIDS and citizenship in Brazil. Social Text. 22(2): 2004
  • S.R. Whyte. Chronicity and control: framing ‘noncommunicable diseases’ in Africa. Anthropology & Medicine. 19(1): 2012; 63–74.
  • S.R. Whyte. Health Identities and Subjectivities. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 23(1): 2009; 6–15.
  • S.F. Dennis Jr., S. Gaulocher, R.M. Carpiano. Participatory photo mapping (PPM): Exploring an integrated method for health and place research with young people. Health & Place. 15(2): 2009; 466–473.
  • B. Kolb. Involving, Sharing, Analysing – Potential of the Participatory Photo Interview. Qualitative Social Research. 9(13): 2008
  • E. Prins. Participatory photography: A tool for empowerment or surveillance?. Action Research. 8(4): 2010; 426–443.
  • Q. Allen. Photographs and stories: ethics, benefits and dilemmas of using participant photography with Black middle-class male youth. Qualitative Research. 12(4): 2012; 443–458.
  • A. Poletti. Coaxing an intimate public: Life narrative in digital storytelling. Continuum. 25(1): 2011; 73–83.
  • S. Kindon. Participatory Video. Editors-in-Chief: . K. Rob, T. Nigel. International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. 2009; Elsevier: Oxford, 96–101.
  • A. Cornwall, J. Gaventa. From users and choosers to makers and shapers: repositioning participation in social policy. IDS Working Paper 127. 2001
  • A. Kleinman, J. Kleinman. How Bodies Remember: Social Memory and Bodily Experience of Criticism, Resistance, and Deligitmation Following China’s Cultural Revolution. New Literary History. 25(3): 1994; 707–723.
  • T.J. Csordas. Embodiment and experience: the existential ground of culture and self. 1994; Cambridge University Press.
  • J. Galvao. Brazil and Access to HIV/AIDS Drugs: A Question of Human Rights and Public Health. American Journal of Public Health. 95: 2005; 7.
  • M. Wemrell, J. Merlo, S. Mulinari. Contemporary Epidemiology: A Review of Critical Discussions Within the Discipline and A Call for Further Dialogue with Social Theory. Sociology Compass. 10(2): 2016; 153–171.
  • L.F. Berkman, I. Kawachi, M.M. Glymour. Social epidemiology. 2014; Oxford University Press.
  • N. Krieger. Theories for social epidemiology in the 21st century: an ecosocial perspective. International Journal of Epidemiology. 30(4): 2001; 668–677.
  • T. Rhodes, K. Wagner, S.A. Strathdee. Structural violence and structural vulnerability within the risk environment: theoretical and methodological perspectives for a social epidemiology of HIV risk among injection drug users and sex workers. Rethinking social epidemiology. 2012; Springer. 205–230.
  • G. Harling, R. Ehrlich, L. Myer. The social epidemiology of tuberculosis in South Africa: a multilevel analysis. Social Science & Medicine. 66(2): 2008; 492–505.
  • L. Richter, A. Stein, L. Cluver. Infants and Young Children Affected by HIV/AIDS. P. Rohleder, L. Swartz, S. Kalichman, L. Simbayi. HIV/AIDS in South Africa 25 Years On: Psychosocial Perspectives. 2009; Springer: New York.
  • P. Palumbo, J.C. Lindsey, M.D. Hughes. Antiretroviral Treatment for Children with Peripartum Nevirapine Exposure. New England Journal of Medicine. 363(16): 2010; 1510–1520.
  • N. Nattrass. Mortal Combat: AIDS Denialism and the Struggle for Antiretrovirals in South Africa. 2007; University of Kwa-Zulu Natal Press: Durban.
  • M. Heywood. Preventing Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission in South Africa: Background Strategies and Outcomes of the Treatment Action Campaign Case against the Minister of Health Current Development. South African Journal on Human Rights. 19: 2003; 278.
  • C. Campbell. Migrancy, masculine identities and AIDS: The psychosocial context of HIV transmission on the South African gold mines. Social Science & Medicine. 45(2): 1997; 273–281.
  • R.K. Jewkes, Y. Sikweyiya, R. Morrell. Understanding Men’s Health and Use of Violence: Interface of Rape and HIV in South Africa. MRC Policy Brief. 2009June. 2009. (Report No).
  • R.K. Jewkes, K. Dunkle, M. Nduna, N. Shai. Intimate partner violence, relationship power inequity, and incidence of HIV infection in young women in South Africa: a cohort study. Lancet. 376(9734): 2010; 41–48.
  • M. De Certeau. The Practice of Everyday Life. 1984; University of California Press.
  • R.B. Jones. Creating Postcolonial Visual Pedagogy. Postcolonial Representations of Women. Explorations of Educational Purpose. 18: 2011; Springer: Netherlands, 195–219.
  • F. Le Marcis. Struggling with AIDS in South Africa: The Space of the Everyday as a Field of Recognition. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 26(4): 2012; 486–502.
  • B. Vale, M. Thabeng. Redeeming Lost Mothers: Adolescent Antiretroviral Treatment and the Making of Home in South Africa. Medical Anthropology. 2016. (just-accepted).
  • L.D. Cluver, R.J. Hodes, E. Toska. ‘HIV is like a tsotsi. ARVs are your guns’: associations between HIV-disclosure and adherence to antiretroviral treatment among adolescents in South Africa. AIDS. 29: 2015; S57–S65.
  • I.A. Kalofonos. 'All I Eat Is ARVs'. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 24(3): 2010; 363–380.
  • R. Prince. HIV and the Moral Economy of Survival in an East African City. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 26(4): 2012; 534–556.
  • B.S. Russell, L.A. Eaton, P. Petersen-Williams. Intersecting epidemics among pregnant women: alcohol use, interpersonal violence, and HIV infection in South Africa. Current HIV/AIDS Reports. 10(1): 2013; 103–110.
  • K.L. Dunkle, M.R. Decker. Gender-based violence and HIV: Reviewing the evidence for links and causal pathways in the general population and high-risk groups. American Journal of Reproductive Immunology. 69(s1): 2013; 20–26.
  • D. Fassin. Humanitarian Reason: A Moral History of the Present. 2011; University of California Press.
  • L.L. Heise. Violence against women an integrated, ecological framework. Violence Against Women. 4(3): 1998; 262–290.
  • A. Giddens. The Consequences of Modernity. 1990; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
  • A. Cornwall. Spending Power: Love, Money, and the Reconfiguration of Gender Relations in Ado-Odo, Southwestern Nigeria. American Ethnologist. 29(4): 2002; 963–980.
  • A. Cornwall. Women’s empowerment: What works and why?. WIDER Working Paper. 2014; 9292308254.
  • E. Mills, Z. Nesbitt-Ahmed, J. Diggins. ‘They Call Me Warrior’: The Legacy of Conflict and the Struggle to End Sexual and Gender-based Violence in Sierra Leone. 2015; IDS.
  • J. Edström, A. Hassink, T. Shahrokh, E. Stern. Engendering Men: A Collaborative Review of Evidence on Men and Boys in Social Change and Gender Equality. 2015; IDS.
  • L.F. Johnson, J. Mossong, R.E. Dorrington. Life Expectancies of South African Adults Starting Antiretroviral Treatment: Collaborative Analysis of Cohort Studies. PLoS Medicine. 10(4): 2013; e1001418.
  • UNAIDS. A. Info. South Africa HIV prevalence. 2015
  • K. Annan. In Africa Aids Has a Woman’s Face. Women and Environments International. 2003; 49–50.
  • P. Lather, C. Smithies. Troubling the angels: Women living with HIV/AIDS. 1997; Westview Press, Inc..
  • S.L. Dworkin, C. Colvin, A. Hatcher. Men’s Perceptions of Women’s Rights and Changing Gender Relations in South Africa Lessons for Working With Men and Boys in HIV and Antiviolence Programs. Gender and Society. 26(1): 2012; 97–120.
  • N. Rose. The Politics of Life Itself: Biomedicine, Power and Subjectivity in the Twenty-First Century. 2006; Princeton University Press: Princeton.
  • S. Robins. AIDS, science and citizenship after apartheid. M. Leach, I. Scoones, B. Wynne. Science and Citizens Globalisation and the challenge of engagements. 2005; Zed Books: London.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.