Seeing Red : : HIV/AIDS and Public Policy in Canada / / Suzanne Hindmarch, Michael Orsini, Marilou Gagnon.

What does it mean to think of HIV/AIDS policy in a critical manner? Seeing Red offers the first critical analysis of HIV/AIDS policy in Canada. Featuring the diverse experiences of people living with HIV, this collection highlights various perspectives from academics, activists, and community worker...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter University of Toronto Press Pilot 2018
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Toronto : : University of Toronto Press, , [2018]
©2018
Year of Publication:2018
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (392 p.)
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Description
Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Acknowledgments --
Introduction --
1. The Rights Response Is (Still) Required: Preserving the Human Rights Core of HIV Exceptionalism in Pursuing the End of AIDS --
2. HIV Criminalization as "Risk Management": On the Importance of Structural Stigma --
3. Institutionalizing Risk in the "Daddy State": Carceral Spaces as HIV Risk Environments --
4. Feeling Sick, Looking Cured!: The Iatrogenic Effects of HIV Public Health Policy on HIV-Positive Gay Men --
5. Aging without a Net: Policy Barriers Facing Older Adults Living with HIV in Canada --
6. Evaluation Policy at AIDS Service Organizations: Managing Multiple Accountabilities --
7. Living and Aging with HIV: Tiptoeing through a Pan-Canadian Policy Maze --
8. Charting the Course: Exploring HIV, Employment, and Income Security through an Episodic Disability Lens --
9. Governing Participation: A Critical Analysis of International and Canadian Texts Promoting the Greater Involvement of People Living with HIV and AIDS --
10. What a Mess! Viewing Trans Women Living with HIV as Managers of Policy Mess --
11. "Good Medicine": Decolonizing HIV Policy for Indigenous Women in Canada --
12. Do It in a Good Way: Recommendations for Research and Policy in Indigenous Communities Aging with HIV/AIDS --
13. On the Experience of Pregnancy: Stories of HIV-Positive Refugee Women in Canada --
14. HIV and Hepatitis C Co-Infection: Pathways to Care, Pathways to Advocacy − A Conversation with Colleen Price --
15. AIDS Activism: Remembering Resistance versus Socially Organized Forgetting --
Conclusion --
Contributors --
Index
Summary:What does it mean to think of HIV/AIDS policy in a critical manner? Seeing Red offers the first critical analysis of HIV/AIDS policy in Canada. Featuring the diverse experiences of people living with HIV, this collection highlights various perspectives from academics, activists, and community workers who look ahead to the new and complex challenges associated with HIV/AIDS and Canadian society. In addition to representing a diversity of voices and perspectives, Seeing Red reflects on historical responses to HIV/AIDS in Canada. Among the specific issues addressed are the over-representation of Indigenous peoples among those living with HIV, the criminalization of HIV, and barriers to health and support services, particularly as experienced by vulnerable and marginalized populations. The editors and contributors seek to show that Canada has been neither uniquely compassionate nor proactive when it comes to supporting those living with HIV/AIDS. Instead, this remains a critical area of public policy, one fraught with challenges as well as possibilities.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9781487510305
9783110606799
DOI:10.3138/9781487510305
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Suzanne Hindmarch, Michael Orsini, Marilou Gagnon.