London School of Economics and Political Science, Institute of Social Psychology, UK.
AIDS Behav. 2012 May;16(4):847-57. doi: 10.1007/s10461-011-9966-2.
Much research has examined how to empower the poor to articulate demands for health-enabling living conditions. Less is known about creating receptive social environments where the powerful heed the voices of the poor. We explore the potential for 'transformative communication' between the poor and the powerful, through comparing two well-documented case studies of HIV/AIDS management. The Entabeni Project in South Africa sought to empower impoverished women to deliver home-based nursing to people with AIDS. It successfully provided short-term welfare, but did not achieve local leadership or sustainability. The Sonagachi Project in India, an HIV-prevention programme targeting female sex workers, became locally led and sustainable. We highlight the strategies through which Sonagachi, but not Entabeni, altered the material, symbolic and relational contexts of participants' lives, enabling transformative communication and opportunities for sexual health-enabling social change.
许多研究都探讨了如何增强贫困人口表达对有利于健康的生活条件的需求的能力。关于创造有利的社会环境,让有权势者倾听贫困人口的声音,人们了解得较少。我们通过比较两个关于艾滋病毒/艾滋病管理的记录详实的案例研究,探讨了穷人和有权势者之间进行“变革性沟通”的可能性。南非的恩塔贝尼项目旨在增强贫困妇女为艾滋病患者提供家庭护理的能力。该项目成功地提供了短期福利,但没有实现当地领导或可持续性。印度的索纳加奇项目是一个针对女性性工作者的艾滋病毒预防方案,该项目成为了当地领导和可持续的项目。我们强调了索纳加奇项目改变参与者生活的物质、象征和关系背景的策略,使变革性沟通和促进性健康的社会变革的机会成为可能,而恩塔贝尼项目则没有做到这一点。