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The AIDS Pandemic in Latin America

Product ID : 35024820


Galleon Product ID 35024820
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About The AIDS Pandemic In Latin America

Product Description Of the more than 40 million people around the world currently living with HIV/AIDS, two million live in Latin America and the Caribbean. In an engaging chronicle illuminated by his travels in the region, Shawn Smallman shows how the varying histories and cultures of the nations of Latin America have influenced the course of the pandemic. He demonstrates that a disease spread in an intimate manner is profoundly shaped by impersonal forces. In Latin America, Smallman explains, the AIDS pandemic has fractured into a series of subepidemics, driven by different factors in each country. Examining cultural issues and public policies at the country, regional, and global levels, he discusses why HIV has had such a heavy impact on Honduras, for instance, while leaving the neighboring state of Nicaragua relatively untouched, and why Latin America as a whole has kept infection rates lower than other global regions, such as Africa and Asia. Smallman draws on the most recent scientific research as well as his own interviews with AIDS educators, gay leaders, drug traffickers, crack addicts, transvestites, and doctors in Cuba, Brazil, and Mexico. Highlighting the realities of gender, race, sexuality, poverty, politics, and international relations throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, Smallman brings a fresh perspective to understanding the cultures of the region as well as the global AIDS crisis. Review Recommended to anyone interested in Latin American politics and international politics. . . . Makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of contemporary Latin America's problems and serves as a wake-up call to the disease's devastating impact in the region.-- The Latin Americanist An important contribution to what has been, until now, a scarce literature.-- Latin American Politics and Society Smallman here attempts to delineate what makes Latin America's experience with [AIDS] unique, offering an overview followed by more focused assessments of regions and countries. . . . Thoroughly researched and well documented, Smallman's work . . . offers many suggestions and sources for further research.-- Library Journal Provides a history of AIDS, its initial recognition in 1981, and the evolution in understanding its cause and spread.-- Choice An ambitious new study of the history of AIDS in the region, will provide . . . anyone interested in the topic with an excellent introduction.--North American Congress on Latin America Anyone with an interest in politics, history, language, culture, religion, and, of course, sociology will learn from Dr. Smallman's book, and find it. . . fascinating. . . . One cannot read this book and not be touched by the courage, candor, despair, and hope in it. . . . Demonstrates that in the hands of a great writer statistics, politics, and history come to life.-- Doody's Book Review Service Anyone with an interest in Latin America or an interest in how HIV has differentially affected what appear to be otherwise similar countries will find this book worth reading. . . . It is a knowledgeable historian's perspective, and a very valuable one.-- AIDS Reader An important contribution to the quite scarce literature on this current epidemic in the region. . . . Will appeal not only to a broad audience but also to scholars working in the history of AIDS as epidemic, as well as professionals, activists, and policy makers who are dealing with AIDS as history.-- Hispanic American Historical Review [Smallman] uses a critical and socially informed approach. . . . Leads the reader through the entire continent, providing a comprehensive portrait of AIDS across Latin America that accounts for commonalities, patterns, differences, and fractures. . . . In the process, the author also provides a quick compact guide to the history and society of each Latin American region, a component that adds value to a sourcebook that no student of health and illness in the Americas should m