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Southern Africa's response(s) to international HIV/AIDS norms: the politics of assimilation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 May 2010
Abstract
This article is interested in the impact of a singular international phenomenon, namely the global securitisation of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, on the domestic structure of three Southern African states: Botswana, Mozambique and South Africa. These countries are geographically located in the epicenter of the global HIV/AIDS epidemic, Southern Africa. However, notwithstanding their common HIV/AIDS burden, Botswana, Mozambique and South Africa present quite different political cultures and institutions which reflected upon the distinctive way they responded to the influence of international HIV/AIDS actors and norms. So, by investigating the latter's impact in these rather diverse settings, the present analysis aims to empirically demonstrate and compare variations in the effects of norm adaptation across states. To carry out this evaluation, the study provides a framework for understanding the securitisation of HIV/AIDS as an international norm defined and promoted mainly by the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), the US government and transnational HIV/AIDS advocacy networks. The HIV/AIDS securitisation norm (HASN) is an intellectual attempt of the present work to synthesise in a single analytical concept myriad of ideas and international prescriptions about HIV/AIDS interventions.
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References
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2 It is important to mention that the present analysis covers a particular period of the HIV/AIDS policy responses in the three case studies, from the mid 1990s to 2006. Since the completion of this article in 2007, there were significant changes in the domestic political systems of Botswana, Mozambique and South Africa with some implications to the direction of their HIV/AIDS policies. Given the clearly defined historical scope of this article, these changes do not compromise the validity of the study's theoretical and empirical findings.
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56 After being formally denounced by his alleged victim, Zuma apologised on national television for having unprotected sex with an HIV-positive woman. In May 2006, he was acquitted of the rape charges by Johannesburg's High Court. Mail & Guardian (1 September 2006).
57 However, given the record-breaking cases of sexual violence against women in South Africa, their power to negotiate the use of condoms is also problematic.
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