There is considerable debate and enquiry concerning the most effective communication strategies for addressing HIV/AIDS issues. James Deane, Executive Director of The Panos Institute, prepared a background paper on this theme for the recent Communication for Development Roundtable, held in Managua, Nicaragua, Nov 26 - 28 2001, and hosted by UNFPA. Click here for the full paper. [1]
We are interested in both your reactions and your perspectives on the most effective HIV/AIDS Communication. See the end of the issue for initial questions and how to contribute.
WHAT'S NEW, WHAT'S NOT?
1. The last 2 years have seen intense debate over different approaches to HIV/AIDS communication. In particular, there has been a growing questioning of social marketing and behaviour change oriented communication... two developments...have focused debate on this area, the...publication of a new framework on Communication produced by UNAIDS, [and]...the work of the Rockefeller Foundation [Communication for Social Change (CSC)]...
2. The UNAIDS Framework calls for refocusing communication interventions on the basis of 5 key contextual domains: (1) government policy, (2) socio-economic status, (3) culture, (4) gender relations, and (5) spirituality. [It] calls for moving away from individual-level theories and models of preventive health behaviours...to more multilevel, cultural, and contextual explanations and interventions...
3. The principles and approach of CSC have been summarised as moving communication frameworks on HIV/AIDS...away from people as the objects for change...on to people as the agents of their own change; away from designing, testing and delivering messages...on to supporting dialogue and debate on the key issues of concern; away from a focus on individual behaviours...on to social norms, policies, culture and a supportive environment; away from technical experts in "outside" agencies dominating the process...on to the people most affected by the issues of concern playing a central role.
SO, IS THIS NEW & DOES IT MATTER?
4. Specific criticisms of these approaches tend to fall into 4 areas:
5. Proponents acknowledge some of these criticisms. Nevertheless, they argue:
A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT
6. Although communication technologies have dominated the discourse around recent developments in information and communications, there have [also] been fundamental changes in the wider communication environment...
HIV BECOMES POLITICAL AGAIN: TREATMENT, STIGMA, MEN
7. Since the beginning of the epidemic... civil society and AIDS support organisations in developing countries have struggled to make their voice heard internationally... [and unlike those formed around issues of women's rights, an] international HIV/AIDS civil society coalition has not emerged...perhaps because there was not a clear issue around which concrete demands for action could be made...
8. At the end of the 1990s, that issue potentially emerged in the form of access to treatment for HIV/AIDS. Arguably for the first time, organisations in the South were able to set their own agenda, demands and priorities... Millions of people in South Africa, Brazil and elsewhere who...formerly regarded the issue of HIV/AIDS as one of public health and sexual behaviour have been drawn into a debate marking it out as an issue of economic justice and human rights. International lobbying has led to...concessions by international pharmaceutical companies to reduce the prices of ARVs and...to...concessions over intellectual property rights at the WTO.
9. A growing movement to confront HIV/AIDS related stigma is taking on a new profile and energy. UNAIDS has designated the issue as the focus of the next World AIDS Campaign.
CHALLENGE: IMMEDIATE ACTION OR NECESSARY REFLECTION?
10. 2 responses are facing communicators:
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SHOULD WE ACCELERATE AN EMERGENCY RESPONSE? OR IS IT TIME TO ASSESS THE STRATEGIES USED SO FAR?
SHOULD WE CONTINUE WITH A PREDOMINANTLY BEHAVIOURAL APPROACH WITH AN EMPHASIS ON SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR? OR SHOULD WE EXPAND THE CULTURAL AND CSC BASED STRATEGIES PROPOSED BY THE UNAIDS & ROCKEFELLER NETWORKS?
DOES THE CHANGING COMMUNICATION ENVIRONMENT IN MOST COUNTRIES DEMAND A CHANGE IN STRATEGY? OR CAN WE ADAPT THE PRESENT STRATEGIES TO THAT NEW ENVIRONMENT?
SHOULD HIV/AIDS COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES BECOME LESS OR MORE POLITICAL?
Have you discussed these issues within your organisation? We would like to know your thinking. Please send insights to Warren Feek wfeek@comminit.com [2]
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