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  1. Screening and Brief Advice for Risky Substance Users among Charismatic and Main Stream Churches in South Africa

    Screening and Brief Advice for Risky Substance Users among Charismatic and Main Stream Churches in South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Journal of Psychology in Africa • Authors: Karl Peltzer --- Human Sciences Research Council & University of the Free State,
    The aim of the study was to investigate screening and brief advice for risky substance users among charismatic and main stream churches in South Africa. The sample included 117 clergy (63 from charismatic and 54 from mainstream churches) chosen randomly...
  2. Sex, disease and stigma in South Africa: historical perspectives

    Sex, disease and stigma in South Africa: historical perspectives

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Peter Delius Clive Glaser
    This paper attempts to analyse historically why stigma and denial around HIV/AIDS is so powerful in South Africa, so powerful that ailing family members can be shunned and evicted. For many observers, the answer lies simply in its being a...
  3. Kenyan pastors’ perspectives on communicating about sexual behaviour and HIV

    Kenyan pastors’ perspectives on communicating about sexual behaviour and HIV

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Ann Neville Miller --- , United States MaryN Kizito --- , United States Jesica Kinya Mwithia --- , United States Lucy Njoroge --- , United States Kyalo wa Ngula --- , United States Kristin Davis --- , United States
    The article presents an analysis of in-depth interviews with 18 leaders of Christian churches in Nairobi, Kenya, regarding the content and context of messages they disseminate to their congregations about sexual behaviour and HIV. The content of messages was nearly...
  4. Predictors of sexual behaviour among church-going youths in Nairobi, Kenya: a cross-denominational study

    Predictors of sexual behaviour among church-going youths in Nairobi, Kenya: a cross-denominational study

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Ann Neville Miller --- Nicholson School of Communication, United States Kyalo wa Ngula --- Nicholson School of Communication, United States George Musambira --- Nicholson School of Communication, United States
    We surveyed church-going youths in Nairobi, Kenya, to investigate denominational differences in their sexual behaviour and to identify factors related to those differences. In comparison with youths attending mainline churches, the youths surveyed at Pentecostal/evangelical churches were less likely to...
  5. Myths or theories? Alternative beliefs about HIV and AIDS in South African working class communities

    Myths or theories? Alternative beliefs about HIV and AIDS in South African working class communities

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: David Dickinson --- Department of Sociology, South Africa
    Despite three decades of public health promotion based on the scientific explanation of HIV/AIDS, alternative explanations of the disease continue to circulate. While these are seen as counter-productive to health education efforts, what is rarely analysed is their plurality and...
  6. Beyond ethical imperatives in South African anthropology: morally repugnant and unlikeable subjects

    Beyond ethical imperatives in South African anthropology: morally repugnant and unlikeable subjects

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Ilana van Wyk --- Institute for Humanities in Africa (HUMA), Upper Campus, Humanities Graduate Building, 4 Floor, University of Cape Town, South Africa
    In this article, I argue that anthropologists' dislike of their subjects in the field poses both epistemological and ethical questions that go beyond concerns about harming or exploiting those we study, about maintaining human relationships, or about the self-reflexivity and...
  7. Generational inversions: ‘working’ for social reproduction amid HIV in Swaziland

    Generational inversions: ‘working’ for social reproduction amid HIV in Swaziland

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Casey Golomski --- Department of Anthropology, South Africa
    How do people envision social reproduction when regular modes of generational succession and continuity are disrupted in the context of HIV/AIDS? How and where can scholars identify local ideas for restoring intergenerational practices of obligation and dependency that produce mutuality...
  8. Yvette Christiansë's Oceanic Genealogies and the Colonial Archive: <em>Castaways</em> and <em>Generations</em> from Eastern Africa to the South Atlantic

    Yvette Christiansë's Oceanic Genealogies and the Colonial Archive: Castaways and Generations from Eastern Africa to the South Atlantic

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Eastern African Literary and Cultural Studies • Authors: Meg Samuelson --- Department of English, South Africa
    This article traces tropes of dispersal and continuity in Yvette Christiansë oeuvre as it performs a genealogical enquiry through oceanic spaces and in and out of the colonial archive. Revolving respectively around St Helena and the Cape, both the poetry...
  9. Beyond ethical imperatives in South African anthropology: morally repugnant and unlikeable subjects

    Beyond ethical imperatives in South African anthropology: morally repugnant and unlikeable subjects

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Ilana van Wyk --- Institute for Humanities in Africa (HUMA), South Africa
    In this article, I argue that anthropologists' dislike of their subjects in the field poses both epistemological and ethical questions that go beyond concerns about harming or exploiting those we study, about maintaining human relationships, or about the self-reflexivity and...
  10. Church rules? The lines of <em>ordentlikheid</em> among Stellenbosch Afrikaners

    Church rules? The lines of ordentlikheid among Stellenbosch Afrikaners

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Annika Teppo --- Nordic Africa Institute, Sweden
    Ethnographic accounts of South African moral codes have mostly focused on so-called black and coloured areas, while the ideals and practices of white people have remained largely invisible and undiscussed. In the post-apartheid era, Afrikaners’ everyday religious practices as well...
  11. Oral histories of HIV/AIDS support group members, NGO workers and home-based carers in KwaZulu-Natal

    Oral histories of HIV/AIDS support group members, NGO workers and home-based carers in KwaZulu-Natal

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Philippe Denis --- School of Religion, Philosophy and Classics, South Africa
    The purpose of this paper is to bring to the attention of the AIDS research community the existence of an oral history project known as the Memories of AIDS Project. The project focused on HIV/AIDS support group members, non-governmental organisation...
  12. Conceptions of love in Ghana: An exploration among Ghanaian Christians

    Conceptions of love in Ghana: An exploration among Ghanaian Christians

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Journal of Psychology in Africa • Authors: Annabella Osei-Tutu --- Department of Psychology, Ghana Vivian A. Dzokoto --- Department of African American Studies, USA Katja Hanke --- Survey Design and Methodology, Germany Glenn Adams --- Department of Psychology, USA Faye Z. Belgrave --- Department of Health Psychology, USA
    We explored conceptions of love from the perspective of Ghanaian Christians. Using an ethnographic approach, we interviewed 61 participants (males = 39; females = 22; age range 20 to 70) on their understanding and experiences of love in the context...
  13. Diving into the Slave Wreck: The <em>São José Paquete d’Africa</em> and Yvette Christiansë’s <em>Imprendehora</em>

    Diving into the Slave Wreck: The São José Paquete d’Africa and Yvette Christiansë’s Imprendehora

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Eastern African Literary and Cultural Studies • Authors: Charne Lavery --- , South Africa
    The first slave wreck to be definitively identified is the São José-Paquete de Africa, a slave ship from Mozambique Island wrecked off the coast of Cape Town. This paper takes that wreck as case study and context for the southern...
  14. Wangari Maathai’s Environmental Bible as an African Knowledge: Eco-spirituality, Christianity, and Decolonial Thought

    Wangari Maathai’s Environmental Bible as an African Knowledge: Eco-spirituality, Christianity, and Decolonial Thought

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Eastern African Literary and Cultural Studies • Authors: Adriaan van Klinken --- , UK
    Recent scholarship has acknowledged the contribution of the environmental activist and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Wangari Maathai (1940–2011), to African ecological and decolonial thinking. As far as Maathai’s engagement with religion is concerned, scholarship emphasises her critique of Christianity for...
  15. HIV/AIDS through the lens of Christianity: Perspectives from a South African urban support group

    HIV/AIDS through the lens of Christianity: Perspectives from a South African urban support group

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Khumbulani Hlongwana --- South African Medical Research Council (MRC), Malaria Research Programme, Sibongile Sylvia Mkhize --- Research Programme of Health Systems Trust (HST),
    HIV is one of the most obscure viruses that humankind has had to face in recent times. Compounding this obscurity are often contesting perspectives on what it means to be HIV infected, and these perspectives are largely constituted by people's...
  16. Stigma as ‘othering’ among Christian theology students in South Africa

    Stigma as ‘othering’ among Christian theology students in South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Adrian D. Van Breda [d74e19]
    HIV is a health and developmental crisis that has profoundly challenged the Christian church in sub-Saharan Africa. Responding to stigma and prejudice against HIV and people living with HIV and AIDS has been a major concern of theologians and Christian...
  17. Is HIV/AIDS a consequence or divine judgment? Implications for faith-based social services. A Nigerian faith-based university's study

    Is HIV/AIDS a consequence or divine judgment? Implications for faith-based social services. A Nigerian faith-based university's study

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Israel B. Olaore --- , , Nigeria Augusta Y. Olaore --- , , Nigeria
    A contemporary reading of Romans 1:27 was disguised as a saying by Paul Benjamin, AD 58 and administered to 275 randomly selected members of a private Christian university community in south western Nigeria in West Africa. Participants were asked to...
  18. “Sing and make music to the Lord”: cultural difference in South Africa’s urban religious soundscapes

    “Sing and make music to the Lord”: cultural difference in South Africa’s urban religious soundscapes

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Douglas Bafford --- , United States
    Scholars of contemporary Christianity have long noted the importance of sacred music in constructing faith communities and distinguishing religious actors from one another. Drawing on historical and ethnographic evidence gathered over 16 months in Johannesburg, South Africa, I examine the...