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African State Policies on HIV/AIDS:A Comparison of Ghana and South Africa |
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Abstract:
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The responses of African states to the HIV/AIDS epidemic
have varied greatly. This paper will analyze the political reasons that
South Africa and Ghana have addressed the HIV/AIDS epidemic in
different ways. I will examine the cases of South Africa and Ghana
because of their different political experiences, HIV infection rates,
and levels of economic development. Politically, South Africa endured
over forty years of apartheid and a recent democratic transition. After
years of military rule, Ghana recently underwent a transition to
democracy. In terms of the HIV/AIDS issue, South Africa has an
HIV-positive rate of 20 percent among its 18-49 year old population, while
Ghana’s infection rate is 3 percent . South Africa’s GNP per capita of $3,210
is ten times higher than that of Ghana ($390). Data for this paper come
from government documents, news accounts, and interviews with
policy-makers. This paper questions how several variables shape
policies on HIV/AIDS in each country: civil society associations,
dependence on donors for health revenue, democratization, political
leadership, media coverage, public opinion, and the neopatrimonial
nature of the African state. In doing so, the paper illustrates the
complex relationship between political forces and aspects of the
disease itself that make policy-making to address HIV/AIDS
problematic. |
Most Common Document Word Stems:
aid (255), polici (159), 2003 (144), south (141), govern (140), africa (135), 2002 (119), ghana (113), polit (83), african (81), health (70), state (70), countri (68), access (65), develop (58), may (56), hiv (54), 2001 (53), civil (51), societi (51), program (51), |
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Association:
Name: The Midwest Political Science Association URL: http://www.indiana.edu/~mpsa/
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Citation:
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MLA Citation:
| Patterson, Amy. and Haven, Bernard. "African State Policies on HIV/AIDS:A Comparison of Ghana and South Africa" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Midwest Political Science Association, Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois, Apr 15, 2004 <Not Available>. 2009-05-26 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p83670_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Patterson, A. S. and Haven, B. , 2004-04-15 "African State Policies on HIV/AIDS:A Comparison of Ghana and South Africa" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Midwest Political Science Association, Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois Online <.PDF>. 2009-05-26 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p83670_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Review Method: Peer Reviewed Abstract: The responses of African states to the HIV/AIDS epidemic
have varied greatly. This paper will analyze the political reasons that
South Africa and Ghana have addressed the HIV/AIDS epidemic in
different ways. I will examine the cases of South Africa and Ghana
because of their different political experiences, HIV infection rates,
and levels of economic development. Politically, South Africa endured
over forty years of apartheid and a recent democratic transition. After
years of military rule, Ghana recently underwent a transition to
democracy. In terms of the HIV/AIDS issue, South Africa has an
HIV-positive rate of 20 percent among its 18-49 year old population, while
Ghana’s infection rate is 3 percent . South Africa’s GNP per capita of $3,210
is ten times higher than that of Ghana ($390). Data for this paper come
from government documents, news accounts, and interviews with
policy-makers. This paper questions how several variables shape
policies on HIV/AIDS in each country: civil society associations,
dependence on donors for health revenue, democratization, political
leadership, media coverage, public opinion, and the neopatrimonial
nature of the African state. In doing so, the paper illustrates the
complex relationship between political forces and aspects of the
disease itself that make policy-making to address HIV/AIDS
problematic. |
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| Document Type: |
.PDF |
| Page count: |
34 |
| Word count: |
16061 |
| Text sample: |
| AIDS Policy Making in Africa: A Comparison of Ghana and South Africa Amy S. Patterson Ph.D. and Bernard Haven Correspondence: Department of Political Science Calvin College DeVos Communication Center 1810 East Beltline SE Grand Rapids MI 49546 apatters@calvin.edu 616-526-7028 Paper Prepared for the Midwest Political Science Conference Chicago IL April 15-18 2004. Please do not cite without permission of authors. 1 AIDS Policy Making in Africa: A Comparison of Ghana and South Africa1 Amy S. Patterson Ph.D. and Bernard |
| of the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper. http://poverty.worldbank.org/prsp/index/php?view=ctry&id=66. Accessed June 30 2003. World Bank. 2003c. The Long-Run Economic Costs of AIDS: Theory and an Application to South Africa. http://www1.worldbank.org/hiv_aids/docs/BeDeGe_BP_total2.pdf. Accessed August 3 2003. World Health Organization. 2002. Ghana Health Indicators. http://www3.who.int/whosis/country/indicators.cfm?country=gha&language=en. Accessed June 17 2003. Youde Jeremy. 2002. AIDS and Democracy in South Africa: Exploring the Connections. Unpublished paper. 33 Zweifel Thomas and Patricio Navia. 2000. Democracy Dictatorship and Infant Mortality. Journal of Democracy 11 2: 99-114. 34 |
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