Former U.S. President George W. Bush's AIDS prevention campaigns required that
a third of all programs be abstinence-only and faith-based. The Obama administration
has lifted that mandate, but the question remains: Are U.S. and other Western
HIV prevention programs ideologically driven?
Many HIV prevention campaigns in Sub-Saharan Africa are based on Western campaigns
like ABC: Abstain, Be Faithful, and Condomize. The ABC method is meant to alter
behavior that increases the risk of HIV infection, but has been criticized for
being too representative of Christian American cultural beliefs. Once credited
with Uganda's initial success in lowering HIV rates, the ABC method is now viewed
more critically.
Despite the United States' investment of over $30 billion on HIV/AIDS projects
worldwide, HIV rates in the region have largely stayed constant or diminished
only slightly. Still, many prominent celebrities, economists, and other wealthy
Americans continue to encourage us to donate to HIV prevention in Africa.
Many academics and public health and development experts argue that Western-imported
programs are ineffective and culturally inappropriate.
Though agency and individuality are emphasized as American values, most African
cultures emphasize compliance with community-wide practices and discourage self-interested
action.
The University of Botswana integrated local cultural norms into its AIDS prevention
media campaign in 2005. The campaign paired traditional Botswana proverbs with
positive messages about condom use and faithfulness. The proverbs drew upon
positive cultural aspects that encouraged HIV-preventative changes in behavior.
What do you think: Would AIDS prevention campaigns be more effective if they
shifted to incorporate local cultural beliefs? Or does a U.S. program need to
reflect and export Western values?
By Julie
Mellin
Photo Credits in Order of Appearance:Telfair
H. Brown, Sr/United States Coast GuardPete
SouzaPierre
Holtz/UNICEFMatt
CorksPDHRemy
Steinegger/World Economic ForumErik
Cleves KristensenKimberly
Burns/USAIDArjunIyer/CAPTION:
University of BotswanaFiona
Bradley