GENDER-SPECIFIC INTERVENTIONS FOR WOMEN AND THEIR MALE
PARTNERS
Grant Title: Love, Marriage, and HIV: Gender and HIV Risk
Funding Source and Project Period:
NICHD, R01-HD41724,
2003-2007
Key HIV Center Personnel :
Principal Investigator: Jennifer S.
Hirsch, Ph.D.
Project Overview
(from abstract submitted to NICHD:
For women in many parts of the world, the behavior that
puts them at greatest risk for HIV infection is unprotected sex within marriage.
This comparative ethnographic study will explore how social and cultural factors
influence marital and extramarital intimate relationships and examine the sexual
and the HIV prevention practices of men and women engaged in building these
relationships across five locations in countries at different stages of the HIV
epidemic. By detailing the processes through which contextual factors shape
women's risk of marital HIV infection, this study will contribute to our
understanding of ways to reduce the risk of heterosexual HIV transmission.
The study is guided by three premises: that the role of
married men in sustaining heterosexual transmission of HIV has been
insufficiently explored; that spreading ideologies of monogamous companionate
marriage may put married women at particular risk, and that culturally specific
knowledge about the social, economic, and emotional context of sexual
relationships can provide important insight into the avenues through which
gender inequality combines with economic organization and emerging ideologies of
marital love to put women at risk for marital HIV transmission.
Five developing country sites representing different stages
of the HIV epidemic have been selected for study: Degollado, Jalisco Tari, Papua
New Guinea, Soc Son, Vietnam, Ubakala, Nigeria, and Bulubandi, Uganda. In each
site, researchers will use ethnographic methods to examine the social and
cultural determinants of the risk of marital transmission of HIV. We anticipate
totals of 200 semi-structured ethnographic interviews with a systematic
ethnographic sample of men and women (40 per site) and 100 marital case
histories (20 per site), to be collected over 6 months of participant
observation. For each field site, ethnographic data will be analyzed using a
multilevel hierarchical coding process to relate specific attitudes and
behaviors to relationship- and macro-level factors. The ethnographic findings
will be pooled to conduct an analysis of key themes and findings across sites.
The assumption that marriage equals monogamy may be costing
women their lives. Data from this project will be used to trace the social and
ideological contexts within which men and women build sexual relationships and
become exposed to HIV risk and to develop proposals for culturally appropriate,
gender-sensitive interventions to reduce this risk.
Updated: 5/16/07 |