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Searching with a thematic focus on HIV and AIDS in Uganda
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HIV/AIDS and the demand for primary school places
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2003How many children will be eligible for primary school in the next 10 years? How will HIV/AIDS affect these numbers and the ability of children to attend school? Researchers from the UK University of Liverpool investigate the potential impact of the epidemic on the demand for primary education in Uganda and Tanzania.DocumentDoes STI treatment prevent HIV? Reconciling trial results in Uganda and Tanzania
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2003Sexually-transmitted infections (STIs) enhance HIV transmission. But trials of STI treatment to prevent HIV in Tanzania and Uganda gave contradictory results. A collaborative project funded by the Department for International Development suggests that the stage of the epidemic and reductions in risky sexual behaviour in Uganda could explain these differences.DocumentHIV and AIDS-related stigmatisation, discrimination and denial: forms, contexts and determinants
Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, 2000This UNAIDS report explores the issues of HIV and AIDS-related stigmatisation and discrimination with reference to two specific case studies in India and Uganda, and through an extensive literature review. The report identifies a number of recurrent themes from both the India and Uganda studies.DocumentThe impact of HIV/AIDS on the education sector in Uganda: examining the impact of HIV/AIDS on governance in the education sector
Association for the Development of Education in Africa, 2004This study examines the impact of HIV/AIDS on governance in the education sector.DocumentHIV/AIDS resource guide for extension workers
Integrated Support to Sustainable Development and Food Security Programme, 2004This resource guide is aimed at building the capacity of extension workers and services working with communities affected by HIV/AIDS.DocumentAssessing the vulnerability of women street traders to HIV/AIDS: a comparative analysis of Uganda and South Africa
Health Economics & HIV/AIDS Research Division, University of Natal, 2004This HEARD study examines women street traders' vulnerability to HIV/AIDS in South Africa and Uganda. The paper examines how conditions of employment in the informal economy influence women’s social and economic marginalisation. It then goes on to explore how this is linked to the social and behavioural dynamics that influence HIV/AIDS.DocumentSocial communications and AIDS population behaviour changes in Uganda compared to other countries
Centre for AIDS Development, Research and Evaluation, South Africa, 2004This study from CADRE examines communications through social networks associated with population behaviour change and a decline in HIV prevalence in Uganda compared with other countries.DocumentHIV/AIDS as a security issue in Africa: lessons from Uganda
International Crisis Group, 2004This report is the third in a series on HIV/AIDS as a security issue from the International Crisis Group (ICG), and draws on the policy experience of Uganda. The report asserts that HIV/AIDS prevention and conflict prevention should go hand in hand: evidence suggests that war can lead to increased risks of HIV/AIDS and HIV/AIDS can make conflicts worse.DocumentDeterminants of personal demand for an AIDS vaccine in Uganda: contingent valuation survey
Bulletin of the World Health Organization : the International Journal of Public Health, 2004This study focuses on two issues concerning the introduction of a preventative HIV/AIDS vaccine in Uganda: what are the key factors that will lead adults to accept a vaccine; and what are possible behavioural responses to being vaccinated?DocumentBehaviour and communication change in reducing HIV: is Uganda unique?
Centre for AIDS Development, Research and Evaluation, South Africa, 2004In this paper from Centre for AIDS Development, Research and Evaluation (CADRE), epidemiological and behavioural data from Uganda is assessed in comparison with other populations where HIV has declined. HIV prevalence declined from 21 percent to 9.8 percent in Uganda from 1991-98.Pages
