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An Issue of Environmental Justice: Understanding the Relationship among HIV/AIDS Infection in Women, Water Distribution, and Global Investment in Rural Sub-Saharan Africa
Author(s) -
Nghana tamu Lewis
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
black women gender + families
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-6462
pISSN - 1935-2743
DOI - 10.1353/bwg.0.0005
Subject(s) - human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , environmental justice , distribution (mathematics) , investment (military) , economic justice , environmental health , geography , economic growth , socioeconomics , political science , medicine , virology , economics , politics , mathematical analysis , mathematics , law
This essay contributes to debates about the impact of HIV/AIDS on women of African descent by juxtaposing two challenges facing rural sub-Saharan African women today: HIV/AIDS and the water crisis. When analyzed in juxtaposition and in the specific context of rural sub-Saharan Africa, the HIV/AIDS and water crises represent an issue of environmental justice. The remediation of these two crises requires comprehension of the interrelations among the political history of sub-Saharan Africa. It requires an understanding of the policies driving global relief efforts that target rural sub-Saharan populations. And it requires insight into the socioeconomic needs of rural sub-Saharan African women as well as the cultural resources among this population that can be mobilized to help resolve the problem.

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