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Archives > Volume 3, No 1

Front Matter (pp. 7-59)

Editorial

  • HIV/AIDS and Human Rights: Continued Commitment in the Second Decade (pp. 1-6)

  • Peter Piot, Susan Timberlake

Moving Forward through Community Response: Lessons Learned from HIV Prevention in Asia and the Pacific (pp. 8-18)

Teresita Marie P. Bagasao

Human Rights Approaches to an Expanded Response to Address Women's Vulnerability to HIV/AIDS (pp. 20-36)

Daniel Whelan

HIV Vaccine Research and Human Rights: Examples from Three Countries Planning Efficacy Trials (pp. 38-58)

Jorge Beloqui, Vichai Chokevivat, Chris Collins

Children Confronting HIV/AIDS: Charting the Confluence of Rights and Health (pp. 60-86)

Daniel Tarantola, Sofia Gruskin

Report

  • UNAIDS: Human Rights, Ethics, and Law (pp. 87-106)

  • Susan Timberlake

Synthesis

  • The Highest Priority: Making Use of UN Conference Documents to Remind Governments of Their Commitments to HIV/AIDS (pp. 107-142)

  • Sofia Gruskin

Commentary

  • AIDS and Human Rights: Where Do We Go from Here? (pp. 143-149)

  • Jonathan M. Mann

Back Matter

 

Perspectives

The Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health: Establishing international processes for state reporting to an independent monitoring body

Benjamin Mason Meier and Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum: How independent monitoring bodies can ensure state reporting, oversight, and accountability in accelerating progress on Millennium Development Goals related to the health of women and children. (April 28, 2011)

La participación social en un contexto de violencia política: Implicaciones para la promoción y ejercicio del derecho a la salud en guatemala

Walter Flores, Ana Lorena Ruano, y Denise Phé Funchal: La participación social en un contexto de violencia política: Implicaciones para la promoción y ejercicio del derecho a la salud en guatemala

Massachusetts health care reform

Beth Waldman [Editor's note: A PDF version of this article is available here] Abstract The United States spends more per capita on health care than nearly every other country; yet despite this level of spending,quality outcomes in the United States are lower than in many developed countries. This poor quality is due in part to [...]

 
 

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