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E-raamat: HIV/AIDS and the South African State: Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Respond [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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For three decades post-apartheid, the HIV/AIDS epidemic from first acknowledgement to its management as a chronic disease, demanded unparalleled attention. This was nowhere more evident than in South Africa. This book explores how the state responded to its responsibilities to defend and protect (human) security. Linking this to the role of the state as sovereign protector and provider of security, it applies the findings to the broader re-interpretation of sovereign responsibility in the 21st Century. This book does not seek to absolve the South African state of its responsibility to respond. Moreover, it argues that although the state, the government, before, during, and after the transition to democracy, was aware of and acknowledged the threat - political, economic and social - posed by the epidemic, it nonetheless chose not to make the epidemic a priority policy issue. As a result, it argues that the South African HIV/AIDS case illustrates the tension inherent between a state’s ultimate sovereign responsibility to respond and its tactical dependence on external contributors to meet the demands of all of its constituents.

This book does not seek to absolve the South African state of its responsibility to respond to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Moreover, it argues that although the state, the government, before, during, and after the transition to democracy, was aware of and acknowledged the threats - political, economic and social - posed by the epidemic, it nonetheless chose not to make the epidemic a priority policy issue. As a result, it argues that the South African HIV/AIDS case illustrates the tension inherent between a state’s ultimate sovereign responsibility to respond and its tactical dependence on external contributors to meet the demands of all of its constituents.
Acknowledgments List of Abbreviations;
Chapter 1 Introduction: The South
African State and the Responsibility to Respond;
Chapter 2 Situational
Analysis of HIV/AIDS in South Africa;
Chapter 3 Social, Economic, and
Political Consequences of HIV/AIDS in South Africa;
Chapter 4 The
(Inter)national Framework of South Africas Policy-Making;
Chapter 5 Policy
Polemics I: Apartheids Demise to HIV/AIDS Rise;
Chapter 6 Policy Polemics
II: Rising to the Challenge of HIV/AIDS;
Chapter 7 Comparative Applications
of the GAP Hypothesis;
Chapter 8 Conclusion and Recommendations;
Dr. Annamarie Bindenagel Å ehoviÄ is a political scientist and public (health) policy analyst with many years of experience in and focused on sub-Saharan Africa and global health and human security. Dr. Å ehoviÄ is currently health analyst at the German Institute for Development Evaluation (DEval), and affiliated with the Willy-Brandt School of Public Policy and the University of Erfurt, Germany, as well as with the health and human security component of the GR: EEN EU FP7 Funded Project at the University of Warwick, UK.