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Social networks, drug injectors' lives, and HIV/AIDS

Part of the AIDS Prevention and Mental Health series
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Social Networks, Drug Injectors' Lives, and HIV/AIDS recognizes HIV as a socially structured disease - its transmission usually requires intimate contact between individuals - and shows how social networks shape high-risk behaviors and the spread of HIV.

The authors recount the groundbreaking use of social network methods, ethnographic direct-observation techniques, and in-depth interviews in their study of a drug-using community in Brooklyn, New York.

They provide a detailed documentary of the lives of community members.

They describe drug-use, the affects of poverty and homelessness, the acquisition of money and drugs, and social relationships within the group.

Social Networks, Drug Injectors' Lives, and HIV/AIDS shows that social networks and contexts are of crucial importance in understanding and fighting the AIDS epidemic.

These findings should revitalize prevention efforts and reshape social policy.

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Product Details
Springer
0306471612 / 9780306471612
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
28/02/1999
English
277 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
general /postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Reprint. Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed. Originally published: 1999.