References
1. Stolberg, S.G., House Wrangles Over Levels of Global Spending on AIDS, in The New York Times. 2003.
2. Gellman, B., An Unequal Calculus of Life and Death, in The Washington Post. 2000.
3. Bildt, C., Fight Poverty, Not Patents, in The Wall Street Journal. 2003.
4. Pisani, E., et al., Back to basics in HIV prevention: focus on exposure. BMJ, 2003. 326(7403): p. 1384-1387.
5. Vick, K., Disease Spread Faster Than the Word: Uninformed Rural Kenyans Try to Make Up for Lost Time, in The Washington Post. 2000.
6. Harrison, A., J.A. Smit, and L. Myer, Prevention of HIV/AIDS in South Africa: a review of behaviour change interventions, evidence and options for the future. South African Journal of Science, 2000. 96(6): p. 285-90.
7. Farmer, P.E., et al., Community-based approaches to HIV treatment in resource-poor settings. The Lancet, 2001. 358(9279): p. 404-9.
8. Parkhurst, J.O., The Ugandan Success Story? Evidence and claims of HIV-1 prevention. The Lancet, 2002. 360: p. 78-80.
9. Jewkes, R.K., J.B. Levin, and L.A. Penn-Kekana, Gender inequalities, intimate partner violence and HIV preventive practices: findings of a South African cross-sectional study. Social Science and Medicine, 2003. 56: p. 125-34.
10. Fassin, D. and H. Schneider, The politics of AIDS in South Africa: beyond the controversies. British Medical Journal, 2003. 326: p. 495-7.
11. Kesby, M., et al., An agenda for future research on HIV and sexual behaviour among African migrant communities in the UK. Social Science & Medicine, 2003. In Press.
12. Fassin, D., Embodied history: Uniqueness and exemplarity of South African AIDS. African Journal of AIDS Research, 2002. 1(1): p. 63-68.
13. Barnett, T. and A. Whiteside, AIDS in the Twenty-First Century: Disease and Globalization. 2002, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
14. Gilbert, L. and L. Walker, Treading the path of least resistance: HIV/AIDS and social inequalities--a South African case study. Social Science and Medicine, 2002. 54: p. 1093-1110.
15. Hunter, M., The Materiality of Everyday Sex: thinking beyond 'prostitution'. African Studies, 2002. 61(1): p. 99-120.
16. Murray, S.O. and K.W. Payne, Medical Policy without Scientific Evidence: The Promiscuity Paradigm and AIDS. California Sociologist, 1988. 11: p. 13-54.
17. UNAIDS, Differences in HIV spread in four sub-Saharan African cities: summaries of the multi-site study. 1999, UNAIDS: Geneva.
18. Packard, R.M. and P. Epstein, Epidemiologists, Social Scientists, and the Structure of Medical Research on AIDS in Africa. Social Science and Medicine, 1991. 33(7): p. 771-94.
19. Farmer, P., AIDS and Accusation: Haiti and the Geography of Blame. 1992, Berkeley: University of California Press.
20. Farmer, P.E., M. Connors, and J. Simmons, eds. Women, Poverty and AIDS: Sex, Drugs, and Structural Violence. 1996, Common Courage Press: Monroe.
21. Ahlberg, B.M., Is There a Distinct African Sexuality? A Critical Response to Caldwell. African Affairs, 1994. 64(2): p. 220-42.
22. Rushton, J.P. and A.F. Bogaert, Population differences in susceptibility to AIDS: an evolutionary analysis. Social Science & Medicine, 1989. 28(12): p. 1211-20.
23. Bibeau, G. and D. Pedersen, A return to scientific racism in medical social sciences: The case of sexuality and the AIDS epidemic in Africa, in New Horizons in Medical Anthropology, M. Nichter, Editor. 2002, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. p. 141-171.
24. Watney, S., "Risk Groups" or "Risk Behaviors"?, in AIDS in the World II, J. Mann and D. Tarantola, Editors. 1996, Oxford University Press: Oxford. p. 431-2.
25. Wojcicki, J.M. and J. Malala, Condom use, power and HIV/AIDS risk: sex-workers bargain for survival in Hillbrow/Joubert Park/Berea, Johannesburg. Social Science and Medicine, 2001. 53: p. 99-121.
26. Wojcicki, J.M., "She Drank His Money": Survival Sex and the Problem of Violence in Taverns in Gauteng Province, South Africa. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 2002. 16(3): p. 267-93.
27. Swart-Kruger, J. and L.M. Richter, AIDS-Related Knowledge, Attitudes and Behaviour among South African Street Youth: Reflections on Power, Sexuality and the Autonomous Self. Social Science and Medicine, 1997. 45(6): p. 957-66.
28. Le Marcis, F., PWAs everyday conditions of life in the Townships: Between structural constraint and individual tactics (Johannesburg). The South African Journal for Social Aspect of HIV/AIDS, 2003.
29. Farmer, P., Sending Sickness: Sorcery, Politics, and Changing Concepts of AIDS in Rural Haiti. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 1990. 4(1): p. 6-27.
30. Campbell, C., Selling sex in the time of AIDS: the psycho-social context of condom use by sex workers on a Southern African mine. Social Science and Medicine, 2000. 50: p. 479-94.
31. van der Vliet, V., The Politics of AIDS. 1996, London: Bowerdean.
32. Campbell, C., Migrancy, Masculine Identities and AIDS: The Psychosocial Context of HIV Transmission on the South African Gold Mines. Social Science and Medicine, 1997. 45(2): p. 273-81.
33. Treichler, P., How to Have Theory in an Epidemic: Cultural Chronicles of AIDS. 1999, Durham: Duke University Press.
34. Seidel, G. and L. Vidal, The implications of 'medical', 'gender in development' and 'culturalist' discourses for HIV/AIDS policy in Africa, in Anthropology of Policy: critical perspectives on governance and power, C. Shore and S. Wright, Editors. 1997, Routledge: London. p. 59-87.
35. Schiller, N.G., What's Wrong with This Picture? The Hegemonic Construction of Culture in AIDS Research in the United States. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 1992. 6(3): p. 237-254.
36. Pigg, S.L., Too Bold, Too Hot: Crossing 'Culture' in AIDS Prevention in Nepal, in New Horizons in Medical Anthropology, M. Nichter and M. Lock, Editors. 2002, Routledge: London.
37. Parker, R., Sexuality, Culture, and Power in HIV/AIDS Research. Annual Review of Anthropology, 2001. 30: p. 163-79.
38. Connors, M.M., Stories of Pain and the Problem of AIDS Prevention: Injection Drug Withdrawal and Its Effect on Risk Behavior. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 1994. 8(1): p. 47-68.
39. Williams, B.G., et al., The Carletonville-Mothusimpilo Project: limiting transmission of HIV through community-based interventions. South African Journal of Science, 2000. 96(6): p. 351-9.
40. Waldo, C.R. and T.J. Coates, Multiple levels of analysis and intervention in HIV prevention science: examplars and directions for new research. AIDS, 2000. 14(S2): p. S18-S26.
41. Farmer, P., Pathologies of Power: Health, Human Rights, and the New War on the Poor. 2003, Berkeley: University of California Press.
42. Campbell, C. and Y. Mzaidume, How can HIV be prevented in South Africa? A social perspective. British Medical Journal, 2002. 324: p. 229-32.
43. Scorgie, F., Virginity Testing and the Politics of Sexual Responsibility: Implications for AIDS Intervention. African Studies, 2002. 61(1): p. 55-76.
44. Vaughan, M., Syphilis in Colonial East and Central Africa: The Social Construction of an Epidemic, in Epidemics and Ideas: Essays on the Historical Construction of Medicine, T. Ranger and P. Slack, Editors. 1992, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. p. 269-302.
45. Vaughan, M., Curing Their Ills: Colonial Power and African Illness. 1991, Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.
46. Horwitz, S., Migrancy and HIV/AIDS: A Historical Perspective. South African Historial Journal, 2001. 45: p. 103-123.
47. Bello, W., S. Cunningham, and L.K. Poh, A Siamese Tragedy: Development and Disintegration in Modern Thailand. 1998, London: Zed Books.
48. Barnett, T., A. Whiteside, and J. Decosas, The Jaipur Paradigm--A Conceptual Framework for Understanding Social Susceptibility and Vulnerability to HIV. South African Medical Journal, 2000. 90(11): p. 1098-1101.
49. Basu, S., Circumventing the Consensus: The USTR, public health, and bilateral trade agreements, in Z-Magazine. 2003.
50. Farmer, P.E. Introducing ARVs in Resource-Poor Settings: Expected and Unexpected Challenges and Consequences. in 2002 International AIDS Conference. 2002. Barcelona.
51. Rosenberg, T., Look at Brazil, in The New York Times Magazine. 2001.
52. Creese, A., et al., Cost-Effectiveness of HIV/AIDS Interventions in Africa: A Systematic Review of the Evidence. The Lancet, 2002. 359: p. 1635-42.
53. Farmer, P., Infections and Inequalities: The Modern Plagues. 1999, Berkeley: University of California Press.
54. Katz, R., Boiling Energy: Community Healing among the Kalahari Kung. 1982, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
55. Mayne, R., M. Bailey, and S. Basu, U.S. Bullying on Drug Patents: One Year After Doha. 2002, Oxfam UK: Oxford.
56. Mahan, D., Profiting from Pain: Where Prescription Drug Dollars Go. 2002, Families USA: Washington D.C.
57. Young, R. and M. Surrusco, Rx R&D Myths: The Case Against the Drug Industry's R&D "Scare Card". 2001, Public Citizen: Washington D.C.
58. Gellman, B., A Turning Point that Left Millions Behind: Drug Discounts Benefit Few While Protecting Pharmaceutical Companies' Profits, in The Washington Post. 2000.
59. IMS Health, Five Year Forecast for the Global Pharmaceutical Markets. 2002, IMS Health: London.
60. Agence France Presse, Cheaper drugs deal on the cards for poor nations, in Mail & Guardian (SA). 2003.
61. World Trade Organization. Declaration on the TRIPS agreement and public health. in Doha Ministerial Conference. 2001. Doha, Qatar: World Trade Organization.
62. Elliott, L. and C. Denny, U.S. wrecks cheap drugs deal, in Guardian (UK). 2002: London.
63. Smith, M., Generic competition, price and access to medicines: the case of antiretrovirals in Uganda. 2002, Oxfam: Oxford.
64. Access to Essential Medicines Campaign, Reneging on Doha. 2003, Médecins Sans Frontières: Geneva.
65. Josefson, D., Unsafe sexual practices are common, say US studies. BMJ, 2003. 327(7405): p. 10-d-0.
66. Sheldon, T., Doctors fear that rise in infection rates points to a return to unsafe sex. BMJ, 2003. 327(7405): p. 10-c-0.
67. Mukherjee, S., Why cheap AIDS drugs for Africa might be dangerous, in The New Republic. 2000.
68. Program in Infectious Disease and Social Change, The Global Impact of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis. 1999, Harvard University: Boston.
69. Barnhoorn, F. and S. van der Geest, "Culturizing" the upsurge of tuberculosis. Social Science & Medicine, 1997. 45(10): p. 1597-9.
70. Navarro, V., A critique of the ideological and political positions of the Willy Brandt report and the World Health Organization Alma Ata declaration. Social Science and Medicine, 1984. 18: p. 467-74.
71. Navarro, V., Neoliberalism, "Globalization," Unemployment, Inequalities, and the Welfare State, in The Political Economy of Social Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life, V. Navarro, Editor. 2002, Baywood: Amityville. p. 33-107.
72. DuBoff, R.B., A Slippery Slope: Economists and Social Insurance in the United States, in The Political Economy of Social Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life, V. Navarro, Editor. 2002, Baywood: Amityville.
73. Kolko, G., Ravaging the poor: The International Monetary Fund indicted by its own data, in The Political Economy of Social Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life, V. Navarro, Editor. 2002, Baywood: Amityville.
74. Laurell, A.C. and O.L. Arellano, Market commodities and poor relief: The World Bank proposal for health, in The Political Economy of Social Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life, V. Navarro, Editor. 2002, Baywood: Amityville.
75. Navarro, V., Is there a Third Way? A Response to Gidden's The Third Way, in The Political Economy of Social Inequalities: Consequences for Health and Quality of Life, V. Navarro, Editor. 2002, Baywood: Amityville.
76. Basu, S., What is needed to conquer AIDS?, in The New York Times. 2000.
77. Basu, S., K. Mate, and P.E. Farmer, Debt and poverty turn a disease into an epidemic. Nature, 2000. 407(6800): p. 13.
78. Basu, S., K. Mate, and N. Johnson, Poverty's Pathologies: Global Inequalities & the Lives of the Destitute Sick. 2000, Institute for Health and Social Justice: Boston.
79. Benatar, S.R., South Africa's Transition in a Globalizing World: HIV/AIDS as a window and a mirror. International Affairs, 2001. 77(2): p. 347-375.
80. Chirwa, W.C., Aliens and AIDS in Southern Africa: The Malawi-South Africa Debate. African Affairs, 1998. 97(386): p. 53-80.
81. Heywood, M. and M. Cornell, Human Rights and AIDS in South Africa: From Right Margin to Left Margin. Health and Human Rights, 1997. 2(4): p. 60-82.
82. Hardt, M. and A. Negri, Empire. 2000, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
83. Sears, A., 'To Teach Them How to Live': The Politics of Public Health from Tuberculosis to AIDS. Journal of Historical Sociology, 1992. 5(1): p. 61-83.
84. Alagiri, P., T. Summers, and J. Kates, Trends in U.S. Spending on HIV/AIDS. 2002, Kaiser Family Foundation: Washington D.C.