Georgia State University.
Urban Stud. 2011;48(5):947-57. doi: 10.1177/0042098010368575.
The question of how urbanisation and poverty are linked in sub-Saharan Africa is an increasingly pressing one. The urban character of the HIV epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa exacerbates concern about the urbanisation - poverty relationship. Recent empirical work has linked urban poverty, and particularly slum residence, to risky sexual behaviour in Kenya's capital city, Nairobi. This paper explores the generalisability of these assertions about the relationship between urban poverty and sexual behaviour using Demographic and Health Survey data from five African cities: Accra (Ghana), Dar-es-Salaam (Tanzania), Harare (Zimbabwe), Kampala (Uganda) and Nairobi (Kenya). The study affirms that, although risky behaviour varies across the five cities, slum residents demonstrate riskier sexual behaviour compared with non-slum residents. There is earlier sexual debut, lower condom usage and more multiple sexual partners among women residing in slum households regardless of setting, suggesting a relatively uniform effect of urban poverty on sexual risk behaviour.
撒哈拉以南非洲的城市化与贫困之间的关系是一个日益紧迫的问题。撒哈拉以南非洲的艾滋病毒流行具有城市特征,这加剧了人们对城市化与贫困关系的关注。最近的实证研究将肯尼亚首都内罗毕的城市贫困,特别是贫民窟居住,与危险的性行为联系起来。本文利用来自五个非洲城市(加纳的阿克拉、坦桑尼亚的达累斯萨拉姆、津巴布韦的哈拉雷、乌干达的坎帕拉和肯尼亚的内罗毕)的人口与健康调查数据,探讨了这些关于城市贫困与性行为之间关系的论断在多大程度上具有普遍性。该研究证实,尽管五个城市的危险行为有所不同,但与非贫民窟居民相比,贫民窟居民表现出更危险的性行为。无论在何处,贫民窟家庭的女性都更早开始性行为,避孕套使用率更低,性伴侣更多,这表明城市贫困对性风险行为有相对统一的影响。