1st Edition

Governance of HIV/AIDS Making Participation and Accountability Count

Edited By Sophie Harman, Franklyn Lisk Copyright 2009
    208 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    208 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Nearly thirty years since HIV/AIDS was first identified, confusion over effective mechanisms of controlling and eradicating the illness remain prevalent. This book highlights the need for comprehensive approaches to governance, as responses to HIV/AIDS become increasingly focused upon the health aspect of the epidemic, and financial commitments become subject to aid fatigue.

    This book examines the roles and influence of multiple actors and initiatives that have come to constitute the global response to the epidemic. It considers how these actors and structures of governance enhance, or limit, participation and accountability; and the impact this is having upon effective HIV/AIDS responses across the world. The book addresses participation and accountability as key elements of governance in four thematic areas: the role of the state and democratic governance; non-state actors and mechanisms of political governance; public-private partnerships and economic governance; and multilateral institutions and global governance. Drawing on the insights of public health specialists; political scientists; economists; lawyers; those working with community groups, and within international organisations, it offers valuable perspectives on the governance of HIV/AIDS.

    Aimed at both academics and practitioners throughout the world, this book contributes to the academic debate surrounding global governance, health and development economics, and the work of multiple international organisations and civil society organisations.

    Introduction: Governance of HIV/AIDS Response: Making Participation and Accountability Count - Sophie Harman Part I: Role of the State and Democratic Governance in the HIV/AIDS Response 1: HIV/AIDS and Democratic Governance in Africa: Illustrating the Impact on Electoral Processes - Kondwani Chirambo 2: Income Inequality and China’s HIV Epidemic: Is there a relationship? - Dylan Sutherland  Part II: Non-State Actors, Popular Participation and Mechanisms of Accountable Governance 3: Accountability and the Right to Health: current understandings and future prospects - Helen Potts 4: The Home-Based Care Alliance in Kenya: Improving governance and transforming communities in the context of HIV and AIDS - Shannon Hayes Part III: Partnerships: Public-Private, Formal and Informal Networks 5: Business and HIV/AIDS Governance gap in South Africa - Antoinette Handley  6: The Private Sector and Governance of HIV/AIDS - Franklyn Lisk  Part IV: Global Governance and Multisectoralism 7: Governance of HIV and AIDS Responses – An Examination of the Institutional arrangements Established to Address the Challenges of HIV/AIDS in Zimbabwe - Felicity Hatendi-Gutu 8: The Causes, Contours, and Consequences of the Multi-Sectoral Response to HIV/AIDS - Sophie Harman Conclusion: Challenge and innovation in governance of HIV/AIDS - Franklyn Lisk 

    Biography

    Sophie Harman is Lecturer in International Politics at City University, London. Previously she was Research Fellow at the CSGR, University of Warwick. She is the founding trustee of 'Trans Tanz', a Tanzanian-based organisation providing transportation to help rural communities affected by HIV/AIDS access healthcare facilities. Franklyn Lisk is currently Professorial Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation (CSGR) at the University of Warwick, UK. Previously he was Professor at the Africa Centre for HIV/AIDS Management, Stellenbosch University, South Africa; founding Director of the ILO Global Programme on HIV/AIDS and the World of Work in Geneva, and ILO Global co-ordinator for UNAIDS. He is the author of Global Institutions and the HIV/AIDS Epidemic: Responding to an International Crisis (also published by Routledge).