Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2024 Jul 25;19(7):e0306894. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0306894. eCollection 2024.
Based upon qualitative interviews with 54 women and men living with HIV across Ontario, Canada, this paper examines the impact of HIV criminalization on the sexual and romantic relationships of people living with HIV. This research highlights the navigation strategies people living with HIV create and employ to both navigate and protect themselves from the law. Through a thematic and intersectional analysis, this study shows how adoption of these strategies is unequal, with access to navigation strategies varying along lines of gender, race, and sexual orientation. As a result, women and racialized people living with HIV face more difficulties navigating the impact of the law. HIV criminalization in Canada fuels and validates HIV stigma and produces vulnerability both within and outside of the relationships of people living with HIV. This paper seeks to understand HIV criminalization from the perspective of those governed by the law, in hopes of producing knowledge which will contribute to legal reform, inform policy, and support the development of efficacious secondary prevention initiatives.
基于对加拿大安大略省 54 名感染艾滋病毒的男女的定性访谈,本文考察了艾滋病毒刑事定罪对艾滋病毒感染者的性和恋爱关系的影响。这项研究强调了艾滋病毒感染者为了驾驭和保护自己免受法律制裁而创造和采用的导航策略。通过主题和交叉分析,本研究表明,这些策略的采用是不平等的,导航策略的获取因性别、种族和性取向的不同而有所不同。因此,感染艾滋病毒的女性和少数族裔面临更多的困难来应对法律的影响。加拿大的艾滋病毒刑事定罪加剧了艾滋病毒耻辱感,并使感染艾滋病毒者的关系内外都变得脆弱。本文试图从受法律管辖的人的角度理解艾滋病毒刑事定罪,希望产生有助于法律改革、为政策提供信息并支持制定有效的二级预防措施的知识。