Title: HIV and Social Complexity
1HIV and Social Complexity Insights from complex
systems theory for more effective responses
- Dr Robin Vincent, Senior AdvisorHIV and AIDS,
Panos London - XVII International AIDS Conference, Mexico 6
August
2Outline
- HIV communication that addresses social aspects
of HIV and AIDS - Research on stigma and discrimination, and gender
- Developments in participatory communication for
social change - Complex systems theory to understand health and
social change
3Why the social aspects of AIDS?
- Previous successful responses (Panos 2003,
2006) role of public communication and social
factors - methodological individualism of behaviour
change (Airhihenbuwa and Obregon 2000) - Need to tackle structural violence in HIV and
public health (Farmer, 2004) - Promising communication for social change
approaches need more investment, research and
evaluation - - Ethiopia youth dialogues
- - 3rd generation Entertainment-education
- - community conversations (UNDP, UNAIDS)
4Key Barriers to Universal Access
- Stigma and discrimination against people living
with HIV and AIDS and vulnerable groups - Inequality faced by women and girls
- UNAIDS country consultations 2005/6 and wide body
of research - Complex social issues power and communication
5Tackling stigma and discrimination
- Still everyday experience for people living
with HIV and AIDS obstacle to prevention - Misunderstood and neglected now recognised as
sustaining social inequalities - Need for multi-levelled response
- Combined action at community and interpersonal,
institutional, legal and policy levels (Panos
2006)
6Tackling stigma and discrimination
- Promising examples common at core (ICRW/DFID
2007) - Role of participatory education
- Legal and structural aspects neglected in
practice - power - Lessons from social movements and civil society
initiatives positive identity (Vincent and
Stackpool-Moore, forthcoming)
7Tackling gender inequity
- Parallel need for multi-levelled action
- Gender embedded in social norms and practices
- Success of participatory communication approaches
- But broader structural constraints, and practical
how-to lacking (UNAIDS 2007) - Limits to addressing entrenched power with
programmes?
8Participatory development limits
- Rise of participatory approaches
- Critiques of participatory development -
dangers of co-optation (Cooke and Kothari, 2001) - Tokenistic involvement of people living with HIV
and AIDS GIPA principle (ICASO, 2004) - Analyse spaces of participation in each case
invited and claimed (Cornwall 2004). - Power relations reproduced or challenged?
9Social life as a complex system
- Emergent character of social life, with
different qualitative states linked to variation
key parameters (degree of inequality) - Different conception of development not
amenable to command and control linear planning
(Rihani,2002) - Away from focus on directing behaviour in HIV
communication
10Complexity of health
- TB epidemic where wealth inequality reaches a
threshold (Byrne 1998) - Wider determinants of health and susceptibility
to HIV (Stillwaggon 2006) - Away from focus on risk behaviour just in
time intervention - Empirical but not narrowly predictive
- Need for basic health and social infrastructure
and capabilities (Sen 2004) - Echoes of Primary Health Care (recent aim of
integration of HIV response with TB, sexual and
reproductive health, nutrition)
11(No Transcript)
12Complexity of politics of AIDS responses
control or support?
- Moralistic and ideologically driven prevention
abstinence only, criminalising of people who
inject drugs, conflation of sex work and
trafficking - AIDS transforming African governance (De Waal
2006) - Participation and rights of PLWHA OR coercion
around treatment compliance - Record of food aid, ARVs used for patrimonial
networks of government - Focus on treatment infrastructure or broader
health systems, rights and access
13Complex systems implications?
- Diversity of initiatives, local freedom of action
- Linking initiatives and feedback association
model of scale (Chetley, 2004) - Enhancing learning and strengthening overall
response - Strengthen basic social support systems and
capabilities not only targeted approach - Change may be emergent (ODI, 2008)
- Puntos de Encuentro, Nicaragua - popular soap,
network of social movements, youth training
(Lacayo 2006)
14Conclusions addressing complexity
- Social challenges need multi-levelled approaches
stigma, gender - Support and facilitate local action without
co-optation or state avoiding responsibility - Ethnographies of participation
- Insights of complex systems - beyond linear
planning to supporting broader capabilities and
social infrastructure and allow emergent change - Further strengthen communication for social
change
15Thanks
robin.vincent_at_panos.org.uk www.panos.org.uk