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Perspectives on Youth, HIV/AIDS and Indigenous Knowledges / edited by Anders Breidlid, Austin M. Cheyeka, Alawia Ibrahim Farag.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Breidlid, Anders., Editor.
Cheyeka, Austin M., Editor.
Farag, Alawia Ibrahim, Editor.
Series:
Youth, Media, & Culture Series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Education.
Local Subjects:
Education.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (187 p.)
Edition:
1st ed. 2015.
Place of Publication:
Rotterdam : SensePublishers : Imprint: SensePublishers, 2015.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
This volume is the result of academic cooperation between scholars in Norway, Sudan, Zambia, and South Africa linked to a master’s program in international education and development. It draws upon studies carried out in Sudan, Zambia, Namibia, and South Africa. Most of the chapters deal with the HIV/AIDS pandemic in various ways. Because youth are the group most vulnerable to HIV/AIDS, the various chapters discuss the complex discursive spaces that youth inhabit and navigate, and where the interlocking concepts of social identity, power, inequality, sexuality, vulnerability, and resilience are brought together. Many of the chapters discuss the HIV/AIDS pandemic in relation to indigenous knowledges and argue for including indigenous knowledges in the fight against the pandemic. The suggestion to include indigenous knowledges opens space for a more varied, holistic, and comprehensive approach to the pandemic. The book invites readers to explore the oppressive and often dangerous socioeconomic situation that many youth in sub-Saharan Africa experience, also beyond the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Chapters on street youth in Namibia and youth in a township in Cape Town discuss the often creative coping mechanisms employed by youth to escape or mitigate the oppressive situations they find themselves in.
Contents:
Preliminary Material / Anders Breidlid , Austin M. Cheyeka and Alawia Ibrahim Farag
Introduction / Anders Breidlid , Austin M. Cheyeka and Alawia Ibrahim Farag
Indigenous Knowledges, the Global Architecture of Education and Health, and the HIV/AIDS Pandemic / Anders Breidlid
The Zambian Bantu Indigenous Explanation of HIV and AIDS / Austin M. Cheyeka
Stigma and the Process of Deconstructing the Social Identity of Women Living with HIV/AIDS in Sudan / Hwiada Mahmoud Abu Baker and Alawia Ibrahim Farag
HIV and AIDS and Teacher Education in Zambia / Trinity Chikwanda
School and Home Sexuality Discourses in Selected Girls’ Secondary Schools in Lusaka / Heather Munachonga
The Sikenge Female Initiation Rite as a Means of Combatting HIV/AIDS / Mushaukwa Matale
Perceptions of Condom Use and Sexual Risks among Out-of-School Youths in the Nakonde District, Zambia / Samuel Silomba
Alleviating HIV/AIDS through Sports and the Ubuntu Cultural Philosophy in Zambia / Kabanda Mwansa
How the Social Context of Five Former Namibian Street Boys Has Conditioned Their Experience with Schooling / Sigbjørn Solli Ljung
Lessons from Children’s Participation in CEYA Capoeira Classes, Cape Town, South Africa / Live Grinden and Louis Royce Botha
About the Contributors / Anders Breidlid , Austin M. Cheyeka and Alawia Ibrahim Farag.
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
ISBN:
9789463001960
9463001964
OCLC:
932171288

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