ClassifiedsMexico XVII - Communication |
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Living for Tomorrow - EstoniaCountryEstonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia RegionGlobal, Africa, Eastern Europe and Central Asia, Western Europe Programme SummaryOrganised by the Nordic Institute for Women's Studies and Gender Research (NIKK), this 3-year action and research project worked to build a gender-centred HIV prevention strategy in Estonia. From 1998 to 2000, Living for Tomorrow worked closely with young people at the AIDS Prevention Centre in Tallinn, Estonia to foster sexual health awareness and safer sexual behaviours among young people, with a focus on gender, youth perspectives, and active learning processes. The project has made available reports (in printed format and on the Internet) the outcomes and processes of its work, and disseminates leaflets and videos produced from young participants' perspectives. Overall aims of the project included:
Development IssuesGender, Youth, Sexual Health, HIV/AIDS, Participatory Research. Key PointsAccording to organisers, the Eastern Baltic rim and other post-Soviet countries have some of the fastest-growing HIV infection rates. Infection numbers doubled in Eastern Europe in 2000 alone. This increase, they say, may be due to an escalation of cross-border mobility with richer countries that has led to sex tourism, commercial sex work, and drug use in post- Soviet countries (where there is economic instability and a lack of local resources). They also point to changing cultural narratives due to influence by media imports from the West, with their commercial and cultural focus on sex. In reshaping these narratives, they say, care must be taken with introducing the concept of "gender": in Estonia, ideas such as emancipation of women or equality for men and women are still associated with the ideology of a Soviet past or negative stereotypes of Western feminism. The project is profiled as a best practice gender/HIV/AIDS project in the UNAIDS Resource Pack on Gender and HIV/AIDS. PartnersNIKK, The AIDS Prevention Centre, gender studies colleagues in the Nordic and Baltic countries and in N.W. Russia, and The Centre for Health Education and Research (CHER), Christchurch University College, Canterbury, UK. UNDP has supported some of the work of the NGO Living for Tomorrow. ContactJill Lewis
Project Co-ordinator The Nordic Institute for Women's Studies and Gender Research P.O. Box 1156, Blindern NO-0317 Oslo, Norway Tel.: +47 22 85 89 31 Fax: +47 22 85 89 50 jill.lewis@nikk.uio.no jlewis@hampshire.edu nikk@nikk.uio.no Living for Tomorrow website OR Sirle Blumberg Director of Living for Tomorrow NGOEstonian AIDS Prevention Centre Tallinn Narva Mnt. 48 EE-0010 Tallinn, Estonia Tel.: +372 6410808 / +372 6273500 sirle@aids.ee OR Stephen Clift Professor of Health Education Centre for Health Education and Research (CHER) Canterbury Christ Church University College Canterbury, Kent CT1 1BA, United Kingdom Tel.: +44 1227 782707 s.m.clift@canterbury.ac.uk CHER website NIKK, The AIDS Prevention Centre, gender studies colleagues in the Nordic and Baltic countries and in N.W. Russia, and The Centr
SourceMessage from Jill Lewis sent to the Gender-AIDS list server on July 30 2003 (click here to access the archives); and the Living for Tomorrow website. Placed on the Communication Initiative site October 06 2003 Last Updated May 21 2004 |
Login / RegisterCulturally Effective StrategiesIf culturally delicate HIV/AIDS factors such as male circumcision or fewer multiple concurrent partners are to be effectively addressed, which communication strategies are most required? [choose a maximum of 3]
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