A study of the Pan Caribbean Partnership against HIV/AIDS (PANCAP): Common goals, shared responses
The Caribbean region has the second highest prevalence of HIV infection in the world after sub-Saharan Africa.
The Caribbean region has the second highest prevalence of HIV infection in the world after sub-Saharan Africa.
The document discusses the processes and results of a multi-year research study jointly undertaken by ICRW, EngenderHealth, and Nepali partners. The project tested the effectiveness of the participatory approach in defining and addressing the reproductive health concerns of adolescents.
Este documento fue publicado por la Coalición ONG SIDA y la UNICEF Republica Dominicana en 2004. Se trata de examinar cinco programas que han sido exitosos en la prevención de VIH/SIDA en la población de adolescentes y jóvenes.
A recent Horizons study conducted jointly with two Dominican NGO - Centro de Orientación e Investigación Integral (COIN) and Centro de Promoción e Solidaridad Humana (CEPROSH) - and the National Program for the Control of STDs and AIDS (DIGECITSS) assessed the impact of two environmental-structur
Documento con varias informaciones sobre VIH/SIDAque constituye un útil recursopara periodistas y comunicadores. Incluye también sugerencias de trabajos periodísticos.
La investigación que aquí se presenta tuvo lugar en una comunidad rural de Morelia, Michoacán, entidad en la que poco más de la tercera parte de la población vive en comunidades rurales.
This article focuses on the relationship between HIV/AIDS and education in countries with different levels of HIV/AIDS prevalence. It concentrates on the sector’s response to school issues, with some attention to teacher training colleges.
The fact sheet suggests that programmes need to consider patterns and consequences of coerced sex when addressing reproductive health, HIV prevention, and other needs of young people.
This paper is one in a series of papers commissioned by the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNOHCHR) in Bangkok for an expert consultation meeting in March 2004. It looks at the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on education from a human rights perspective.
Research undertaken with UNESCO support by Professor Wilma Bailey and Dr.