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Intersectionality: a challenge for feminist HIV/AIDS research?
[journal article]
Abstract The aim of this article is to engage critically with feminist HIV/AIDS research from an ‘intersectional’ perspective. Focusing in particular on the work of Tamsin Wilton (1997) and Janet Holland et al. (1998), the article examines how ‘race’, ethnicity an... view more
The aim of this article is to engage critically with feminist HIV/AIDS research from an ‘intersectional’ perspective. Focusing in particular on the work of Tamsin Wilton (1997) and Janet Holland et al. (1998), the article examines how ‘race’, ethnicity and class are theorized and conceptualized in this literature. Through a scrutiny of their empirical analyses, the article points to the pitfalls of a descriptive approach to ‘differences’ and problematizes Wilton's and Holland et al.'s theoretical focus on gender and sexuality. The benefit of including a critical perspective on ‘race’ and ethnicity and other axes of domination is illustrated further using some empirical examples from the Swedish HIV/AIDS policy context. The article concludes by arguing that an intersectional perspective poses a challenge to feminist HIV/AIDS research that needs to be addressed in order to produce an effective sexual health policy.... view less
Free Keywords
cultural racism; HIV/AIDS; intersectionality; safer sex; Sweden
Document language
English
Publication Year
2006
Page/Pages
p. 229-243
Journal
European Journal of Women's Studies, 13 (2006) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1350506806065754
Status
Postprint; peer reviewed
Licence
PEER Licence Agreement (applicable only to documents from PEER project)