Le SIDA en Afrique subsaharienne (serveur d'exploration)

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<title xml:lang="en">Engendering care: HIV, humanitarian assistance in Africa, and the reproduction of gender stereotypes</title>
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<name sortKey="Mindry, Deborah" sort="Mindry, Deborah" uniqKey="Mindry D" first="Deborah" last="Mindry">Deborah Mindry</name>
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<idno type="pmid">20432080</idno>
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<title xml:lang="en" level="a" type="main">Engendering care: HIV, humanitarian assistance in Africa, and the reproduction of gender stereotypes</title>
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<name sortKey="Mindry, Deborah" sort="Mindry, Deborah" uniqKey="Mindry D" first="Deborah" last="Mindry">Deborah Mindry</name>
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<title level="j">Culture, health & sexuality</title>
<idno type="ISSN">1369-1058</idno>
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<p id="P1">This paper takes as starting point research conducted in Durban, South Africa to unravel the complexities of care ethics in the context of humanitarian aid. It investigates how the gendering of care shapes humanitarian aid in the context of the HIV/AIDS epidemics in Africa constructing an image of “virile” and “violent” African masculinity. Humanitarian organizations construct imagined relations of caring invoking notions of a shared humanity as informing the imperative to facilitate change. This paper draws on varied examples of research and NGO activity to illustrate how these relations of care are gendered. Humanitarian interventions which invoke universalizing conceptions of need could instead draw on feminist care ethics that seeks to balance rights, justice and care in ways that attend to the webs of relationships through which specific lived realities are shaped. Essentialising, feminized discourses on care result in a skewed analysis of international crises that invariably invoke women (and children) as victims in need of care and, at best, ignore the lived experiences of men, and at worst, cast men as virile and violent vectors of disease and social disorder.</p>
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<journal-id journal-id-type="nlm-journal-id">100883416</journal-id>
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<issn pub-type="epub">1464-5351</issn>
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<article-id pub-id-type="pmid">20432080</article-id>
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<article-title>Engendering care: HIV, humanitarian assistance in Africa, and the reproduction of gender stereotypes</article-title>
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<name>
<surname>Mindry</surname>
<given-names>Deborah</given-names>
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<aff id="A1">Program in Global Health, University of California, Los Angeles, USA.</aff>
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<pub-date pub-type="nihms-submitted">
<day>17</day>
<month>2</month>
<year>2012</year>
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<pub-date pub-type="ppub">
<month>6</month>
<year>2010</year>
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<pub-date pub-type="pmc-release">
<day>04</day>
<month>9</month>
<year>2014</year>
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<volume>12</volume>
<issue>5</issue>
<fpage>555</fpage>
<lpage>568</lpage>
<pmc-comment>elocation-id from pubmed: 10.1080/13691051003768140</pmc-comment>
<abstract>
<p id="P1">This paper takes as starting point research conducted in Durban, South Africa to unravel the complexities of care ethics in the context of humanitarian aid. It investigates how the gendering of care shapes humanitarian aid in the context of the HIV/AIDS epidemics in Africa constructing an image of “virile” and “violent” African masculinity. Humanitarian organizations construct imagined relations of caring invoking notions of a shared humanity as informing the imperative to facilitate change. This paper draws on varied examples of research and NGO activity to illustrate how these relations of care are gendered. Humanitarian interventions which invoke universalizing conceptions of need could instead draw on feminist care ethics that seeks to balance rights, justice and care in ways that attend to the webs of relationships through which specific lived realities are shaped. Essentialising, feminized discourses on care result in a skewed analysis of international crises that invariably invoke women (and children) as victims in need of care and, at best, ignore the lived experiences of men, and at worst, cast men as virile and violent vectors of disease and social disorder.</p>
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<kwd>humanitarian aid</kwd>
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