Fighting For Our Lives
280 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:21 Aug 2006
ISBN:9780813538679
CA$43.95 Back Order
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Fighting For Our Lives

New York's AIDS Community and the Politics of Disease

Rutgers University Press

In the first decade of the AIDS epidemic, New York City was struck like no other. By the early nineties, it was struggling with more known cases than the next forty most infected cities, including San Francisco, combined.

Fighting for Our Lives is the first comprehensive social history of New York's AIDS community-a diverse array of people that included not only gay men, but also African Americans, Haitians, Latinos, intravenous drug users, substance abuse professionals, elite supporters, and researchers. Looking back over twenty-five years, Susan Chambré focuses on the ways that these disparate groups formed networks of people and organizations that-both together and separately-supported persons with AIDS, reduced transmission, funded research, and in the process, gave a face to an epidemic that for many years, whether because of indifference, homophobia, or inefficiency, received little attention from government or health care professionals.

Beyond the limits of New York City, and even AIDS, this case study also shows how any epidemic provides a context for observing how societies respond to events that expose the inadequacies of their existing social and institutional arrangements. By drawing attention to the major faults of New York's (and America's) response to a major social and health crisis at the end of the twentieth century, the book urges more effective and sensitive actions-both governmental and civil-in the future.

Fighting for Our Lives is an invaluable history of the struggle by citizen groups for more sensible and humane AIDS policies. Anyone who wants to know something of the politics of AIDS should read this book. It's exhaustively researched and the result is that we have an authoritative history of an important period in the evolution of the disease. Jeffrey M. Berry, author of A Voice for Nonprofits
Fighting for Our Lives is an invaluable history of the struggle by citizen groups for more sensible and humane AIDS policies. Anyone who wants to know something of the politics of AIDS should read this book. It's exhaustively researched and the result is that we have an authoritative history of an important period in the evolution of the disease. Jeffrey M. Berry, author of A Voice for Nonprofits
Susan M. Chambré is a professor of sociology at Baruch College of the City University of New York and the author of Good Deeds in Old Age.
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The invention of safe sex
Fighting AIDS is everyone's business
The changing face of AIDS
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Our place at the table
Finding a cure
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The politics of disease
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