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Author Notes:

swinske@emory.edu

Acknowledgements: Special thanks go to Kim Miller and Rob Stephenson for their advice and guidance.

Thanks also to research assistants Camilla Burkot, Liz Coleclough, Wendee Gardner, Rosalie Haughton, Samantha Huffman, Amy Patterson and Caddie Putnam Rankin.

Subject:

Research Funding:

The research described here was supported by Grant Number 1 R03 HD054323 01 A1 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. This research was also supported in part by the Emory Center for AIDS Research (P30 AI050409) and by Emory Global Health Institute.

Keywords:

  • Young people
  • Africa
  • HIV
  • abstinence
  • narratives

Making sense of abstinence: social representations in young Africans’ HIV-related narratives from six countries

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Journal Title:

Culture, Health and Sexuality

Volume:

Volume 13, Number 8

Publisher:

, Pages 945-959

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

Despite the prominence of abstinence promotion in HIV prevention for young Africans, there is little documentation concerning its reception and interpretation. With the purpose of informing programmatic practice, we examined how young Africans from six countries with contrasting HIV prevalence rates make sense of abstinence. ‘Scenarios from Africa’ scriptwriting contests invite young people to contribute ideas for short films about HIV. Using thematic narrative-based approaches, we analyzed a stratified random sample of 586 (~5%) of these narratives written in 2005 by young women and men aged 10–24 years from Senegal, Burkina Faso, South-East Nigeria, Kenya, Namibia and Swaziland. Abstinence was considerably more prominent as a theme in the samples from SE Nigeria, Kenya and Swaziland. It was articulated in relation to conservative Christian sexual morality and in opposition to condom use with particular intensity in SE Nigeria, with stigmatising implications for non-abstainers. However, cross-national commonalities were more striking than differences. Examples of non-stigmatising pro-abstinence messaging highlighted the appeal of discourses of romantic love and future plans across countries and demographic characteristics. The analysis yielded contextual understanding, youth-driven ideas, and recommendations to inform comprehensive HIV prevention efforts.

Copyright information:

© 2011 Taylor & Francis

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