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BRIDGE Bibliography 18: Women and girls living with HIV/AIDS: overview and annotated bibliography
BRIDGE, 2007HIV/AIDS is both driven by and entrenches gender inequality, leaving women more vulnerable than men to its impact. This report - consisting of an overview, annotated bibliography, and contacts section - considers the specific challenges faced by women and girls who are living with HIV and AIDS.DocumentLGBTI Organising in East Africa: The True Test for Human Rights Defenders
Urgent Action Fund for Women's Human Rights, 2005Sexual activities and identities that go against the grain of mainstream heterosexuality and expected gender behaviour - most visibly lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) - are frequently subject to social repression in the form of verbal abuse, silence, hate crimes, 'corrective rape' of lesbians, honour-related violence and forced marriage.DocumentAchieving Women's Economic and Social Rights: Strategies and Lessons from Experience
2006What are the greatest challenges that activists encounter in their efforts to improve economic and social rights for women? This Association of Women in Development (AWID) study, conducted in 2005, aimed to answer this question by interviewing 50 activists working in diverse settings all over the world.DocumentRelationships and Sex: A Guide for Women with HIV
Terrence Higgins Trust, 2005Being HIV positive can often make you feel that it's just too difficult to have an intimate relationship with anyone. But you are the same person you were before you became HIV positive; your ability to form relationships need not alter because of HIV.DocumentWomen's Treatment Literacy Toolkit
Southern Africa HIV/AIDS Information and Dissemination Service, 2005In Southern Africa, there are 13 women living with HIV for every 10 infected men, and this gap continues to widen.DocumentSexual and Reproductive Health for HIV-Positive Women and Adolescent Girls: Manual for Trainers and Programme Managers
2006Sexual and reproductive rights apply to all individuals regardless of HIV status. Yet more often than not, the rights of HIV positive women and adolescent girls are not recognised or given priority. Health workers need both training and support to eliminate stigma and discrimination towards women living with HIV and to provide quality safe and compassionate care to HIV positive women.DocumentSex, Life and the Female Condom: Some Views of HIV Positive Women
Reproductive Health Matters, 2006This paper offers insights into the experiences of HIV positive women with the female condom, drawing on the responses of 18 ICW members to an email survey conducted in 2005. Major reported barriers to female condom use included cost and sporadic or limited access. All respondents talked about needing to negotiate the use of female condoms with their male sex partners.DocumentFact Sheet - Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights
2006This short fact-sheet frames key issues and advocacy messages based on the findings of project work by ICW on the sexual and reproductive rights of HIV positive women.DocumentSexual and Reproductive Health of HIV Positive Women and Adolescent Girls: A Dialogue on Rights, Policies and Services, Global Electronic Forum, Report on Results
United Nations Population Fund, 2006How have international human rights documents or advocacy efforts facilitated HIV positive women's access to prevention, treatment and care services, if at all? How can we advocate for stronger enforcement of positive women's human rights?DocumentAdvocacy Tool: the Sexual and Reproductive Rights and Health of HIV Positive Women in South Africa
2006South Africa is said to be the country with the highest total number of people living with HIV and AIDS. In 2004, it was estimated that 50.75% of those infected between the ages of 15-49 years were women, yet advocacy work had revealed that HIV positive women in South Africa were experiencing considerable barriers in accessing services at the family, community and national levels.Pages
