Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Context
- Part II Illness Case Studies
- Part III Globalization, Development, and Health
- Part IV HIV/AIDS
- 12 Of Savages and Mass Killing: HIV/AIDS, Africa and the Crisis of Global Health Governance
- 13 Vicissitudes of AIDS Policies in Burkina Faso from 1985 to 2001: A Historical Perspective
- 14 Factors Associated with Deliberate Attempts to Transmit HIV Infection among Persons Living with HIV/AIDS in Tanzania
- 15 Development and Alternative Mitigation Treatment Opportunities of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic
- 16 Confusion, Anger, and Denial: Results of HIV/AIDS Focus Group Discussions with Urban Adult Zimbabweans
- 17 Three Proposals for Analyzing the Economic Growth Effects of HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa
- List of Contributors
- Index
- Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora
12 - Of Savages and Mass Killing: HIV/AIDS, Africa and the Crisis of Global Health Governance
from Part IV - HIV/AIDS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Part I Context
- Part II Illness Case Studies
- Part III Globalization, Development, and Health
- Part IV HIV/AIDS
- 12 Of Savages and Mass Killing: HIV/AIDS, Africa and the Crisis of Global Health Governance
- 13 Vicissitudes of AIDS Policies in Burkina Faso from 1985 to 2001: A Historical Perspective
- 14 Factors Associated with Deliberate Attempts to Transmit HIV Infection among Persons Living with HIV/AIDS in Tanzania
- 15 Development and Alternative Mitigation Treatment Opportunities of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic
- 16 Confusion, Anger, and Denial: Results of HIV/AIDS Focus Group Discussions with Urban Adult Zimbabweans
- 17 Three Proposals for Analyzing the Economic Growth Effects of HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa
- List of Contributors
- Index
- Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora
Summary
Our response to AIDS has so far been a failure. There has been scientific progress, but with few dividends for people living with poverty as well as HIV. In most of sub-Saharan Africa, they have access to neither prevention nor treatment. Three million deaths this year, and not yet counted millions of new infections, bespeak massive failure.
—Paul Farmer, “AIDS as a Global Emergency”For countries in southern Africa … the AIDS epidemic is a real weapon of mass destruction.
—Kofi Annan, year-end press conference, New York City, December 19, 2003It's mass murder by complacency. … This pandemic cannot be allowed to continue, and those who watch it unfold with a kind of pathological equanimity must be held to account. There may yet come a day when we have peacetime tribunals to deal with this particular version of crimes against humanity.
—Stephen Lewis, Text of UN Briefing on HIV/AIDS in Africa, January 9, 2003The world is just one village. Our tolerance of disease in any place in the world is at our own peril.
—Nobel Laureate Joshua Lederberg, Quoted in Laurie Garrett, The Coming Plague: Emerging Infectious Diseases in a World out of Balance- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- HIV/AIDS, Illness, and African Well-Being , pp. 271 - 286Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2007