Publication Cover
Culture, Health & Sexuality
An International Journal for Research, Intervention and Care
Volume 17, 2015 - Issue sup2: Beyond Working with Men and Boys
3,640
Views
36
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Lessons learned from engaging men in sexual and reproductive health as clients, partners and advocates of change in the Hoima district of Uganda

, , &
Pages 190-205 | Received 21 Oct 2014, Accepted 07 Mar 2015, Published online: 08 May 2015

References

  • Barker, G., C. Ricardo, and M. Nascimento. 2007. Engaging Men and Boys in Changing Gender-Based Inequity in Health: Evidence from Program Interventions. Geneva: World Health Organization.
  • Barker, G., C. Ricardo, M. Nascimento, and A. Olukoya. 2010. “Questioning Gender Norms with Men to Improve Health Outcomes: Evidence of Impact.” Global Public Health 5 (5): 539–553.
  • Bauer, M., and G. Gaskell. 2000. Qualitative Researching with Text, Image and Sound: A Practical Handbook. London: Sage Publications.
  • Bonnell, C., A. Fletcher, M. Morton, T. Lorenc, and L. Moore. 2012. “Realist Randomised Controlled Trials: A New Approach to Evaluating Complex Public Health Interventions.” Social Science & Medicine 75 (12): 2299–2306.
  • Campbell, C. 2004. “Creating Environments that Support Peer Education: Experiences from HIV/AIDS-Prevention in South Africa.” Health Education 104 (4): 197–200.
  • Campo-Engelstein, L. 2013. “Raging Hormones, Domestic Incompetence, and Contraceptive Indifference: Narratives Contributing to the Perception that Women Do Not Trust Men to Use Contraception.” Culture, Health & Sexuality 15 (3): 283–295.
  • Cornish, F., and C. Campbell. 2009. “The Social Conditions for Successful Peer Education: A Comparison of Two HIV Prevention Programs Run by Sex Workers in India and South Africa.” American Journal of Community Psychology 44 (1–2): 123–135.
  • Dworkin, S., A. Hatcher, C. Colvin, and D. Peacock. 2013. “Impact of a Gender-Transformative HIV and Anti-violence Program on Gender Ideologies and Masculinities in Two Rural, South African Communities.” Men and Masculinities 16 (2): 181–202.
  • Foss, A., M. Hossain, P. Vickerman, and C. Watts. 2007. “A Systematic Review of Published Evidence on Intervention Impact on Condom Use in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.” Sexually Transmitted Infections 83 (7): 510–516.
  • Greene, M. E., M. Mehta, J. Pulerwitz, D. Wulf, A. Bankole, and S. Singh. 2006. “Involving Men in Reproductive Health: Contributions to Development.” Background paper to the report Public Choices, Private Decisions: Sexual and Reproductive Health and the Millennium Development Goals. Washington, DC: Millennium Project.
  • Hawkes, S., and K. Buse. 2013. “Gender and Global Health: Evidence, Policy, and Inconvenient Truths.” The Lancet 381 (9879): 1783–1787.
  • Hearn, J. 2004. “From Hegemonic Masculinity to the Hegemony of Men.” Feminist Theory 5 (1): 49–72.
  • IPPF. 2008. Promoting the Involvement of Boys and Men in Reproductive Health and HIV/AIDS: Findings from a Review of IPPF Projects in Lesotho and Uganda. Nairobi: IPPF.
  • Kaida, A., W. Kipp, P. Hessel, and J. Konde-Lule. 2005. “Male Participation in Family Planning: Results from a Qualitative Study in Mpigi District, Uganda.” Journal of Biosocial Science 37 (3): 269–286.
  • Kauffman, M., T. Shefer, M. Crawford, L. Simbayi, and S. Kalichman. 2008. “Gender Attitudes, Sexual Power, HIV Risk: A Model for Understanding HIV Risk Behavior of South African Men.” AIDS Care 20 (4): 434–441.
  • Kaye, D. K., F. Mirembe, A. Mia Ekstrom, G. Bantebya, and A. Johannson. 2005. “The Social Construction and Context of Domestic Violence in Wakiso District, Uganda.” Culture, Health & Sexuality 7 (6): 625–635.
  • Kipp, W., S. Chacko, L. Laing, and G. Kabagambe. 2007. “Adolescent Reproductive Health in Uganda: Issues Related to Access and Quality of Care.” Journal of Adolescent Medical Health 19 (4): 383–393.
  • Lakwo, A. 2006. Microfinance, Rural Livelihoods, and Women's Empowerment in Uganda, Research Report 85/2006. Leiden: African Studies Centre (ASC).
  • Morrell, R., R. Jewkes, and G. Lindegger. 2012. “Hegemonic Masculinity/Masculinities in South Africa: Culture, Power, and Gender Politics.” Men and Masculinities 15 (1): 11–30.
  • Noar, S., and P. Morrokoff. 2002. “The Relationship Between Masculinity Ideology, Condom Attitudes, and Condom Use Stage of Change: A Structural Equation Modeling Approach.” International Journal of Men's Health 1 (1): 43–58.
  • Ntshebe, O., J. Pitso, and A. Segobye. 2006. “The Use of Culturally Themed HIV Messages and their Implications for Future Behaviour Change Communication Campaigns: The Case of Botswana.” SAHARA-J: Journal Of Social Aspects Of HIV/AIDS 3 (2): 466–476.
  • Pascoe, L., M. Herstad, T. Shand, and L. van den Heever. 2012. Building Male Involvement in SRHR: A Basic Model for Male Involvement in Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights. Cape Town: Sonke Gender Justice Network.
  • Peacock, D., B. Khumalo, and E. McNab. 2006. “Men and Gender Activism in South Africa: Observations, Critiques and Recommendations for the Future.” Agenda 20 (69): 71–82.
  • Peacock, D., L. Stemple, J. Sawires, D. Sharif, and T. Coates. 2009. “Men, HIV/AIDS, and Human Rights.” JAIDS Journal Of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes 51 (supplement 3): S119–S125.
  • Pool, R., G. Hart, G. Green, S. Harrison, S. Nyanzi, and J. Whitworth. 2000. “Men's Attitudes to Condoms and Female Controlled Means of Protection Against HIV and STDs in South-Western Uganda.” Culture, Health & Sexuality 2 (2): 197–211.
  • Ratele, K. 2014. “Currents Against Gender Transformation of South African Men: Relocating Marginality to the Centre of Research and Theory of Masculinities.” Norma: Nordic Journal For Masculinity Studies 9 (1): 30–44.
  • Ratele, K. 2014. “Gender Equality in the Abstract and Practice.” Men and Masculinities 17 (5): 510–514.
  • Shand, T., H. Thomson de-Boor, W. van den Berg, D. Peacock, and L. Pascoe. 2014. “The HIV Blind Spot: Men and HIV Testing, Treatment and Care in Sub-Saharan Africa.” IDS Bulletin 45 (1): 53–60.
  • Sideris, T. 2004. “Men, Identity and Power: A Case Study of the Re-invention of ‘tradition’: Implications for Involving Men in Training and Education about Gender.” Agenda 18 (60): 88–93.
  • Stern, E, A. Clarfelt, and R. Buikema. 2014. “The use of Sexual History Narratives to Assess South African men's Engagements with Masculine Hegemony in the Context of HIV/AIDS.” Men and Masculinities, Published online 5 November, 2014.
  • Sternberg, P., and J. Hubley. 2004. “Evaluating Men's Involvement as a Strategy in Sexual and Reproductive Health Promotion.” Health Promotion International 19 (3): 389–396.
  • Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS). 2006. The Uganda Population and Housing Census, Analytical Report, Abridged Version. Kampala Uganda: Uganda Bureau of Statistics.
  • Wade, J. 2008. “Masculinity Ideology, Male Reference Group Identity Dependence, and African American Men's Health-Related Attitudes and Behaviors.” Psychology of Men & Masculinity 9 (1): 5–16.
  • Walker, L. 2005. “Men Behaving Differently: South African Men Since 1994.” Culture, Health & Sexuality 7 (3): 225–238.
  • World Health Organization. 2012. Guidance on Couples HIV Testing and Counselling Including Antiretroviral Therapy for Treatment and Prevention in Serodiscordant Couples: Recommendations for a Public Health Approach. Geneva: World Health Organization.