The Political Economy of Marriage and HIV: The ABC Approach, “Safe” Infidelity, and Managing Moral Risk in Uganda
- 1 July 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 97 (7) , 1198-1208
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2006.088682
Abstract
Research has shown that married women's greatest risk for HIV infection is their husbands' extramarital sexual activities. Using 6 months of ethnographic research in southeastern Uganda, I examined how the social and economic contexts surrounding men's extramarital sexuality and the dynamics of marriage put men and women at risk for HIV infection. I found that Uganda's HIV prevention messages may be inadvertently contributing to increased difficulty in acknowledging HIV risk and to newer forms of sexual secrecy and that structural determinants, including persistent poverty, intersect with gender inequalities to shape marital risk. After examining a community effort to regulate men's sexuality, I suggest that HIV prevention strategies should focus more on endogenous forms of risk reduction while simultaneously addressing structural factors that facilitate opportunities for men's extramarital sex.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Population-Level HIV Declines and Behavioral Risk Avoidance in UgandaScience, 2004
- The politics of action on AIDS: a case study of UgandaPublic Administration and Development, 2004
- A, B and C in Uganda: The Roles of Abstinence, Monogamy and Condom Use in HIV DeclineReproductive Health Matters, 2004
- Age Differences in Sexual Partners and Risk of HIV-1 Infection in Rural UgandaJAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 2003
- Behaviour and communication change in reducing HIV: is Uganda unique?African Journal of AIDS Research, 2003
- The Social Constructions of Sexuality: Marital Infidelity and Sexually Transmitted Disease–HIV Risk in a Mexican Migrant CommunityAmerican Journal of Public Health, 2002
- Declining HIV-1 incidence and associated prevalence over 10 years in a rural population in south-west Uganda: a cohort studyThe Lancet, 2002
- The Ugandan success story? Evidence and claims of HIV-1 preventionThe Lancet, 2002
- Sexual networks in Uganda: Casual and commercial sex in a trading townAIDS Care, 1997
- Some Determinants of Marriage Stability in Busoga: A Reformulation of Gluckman's HypothesisAfrica, 1957