About The Book
										 AIDS is now the leading cause of death in Africa, where twenty-eight  million people are HIV-positive, and where some twelve million children  have...
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											lost one or both parents to AIDS. In Zimbabwe, 45 percent of  children under the age of five are HIV-positive, and the epidemic has  shortened life expectancy by twenty-two years. A fifteen-year-old in  Botswana or South Africa has a one-in-two chance of dying of AIDS. AIDS  deaths are so widespread in sub-Saharan Africa that small children now  play a new game called “Funerals.â€The Children of Africa Confront AIDS depicts the reality of how  African children deal with the AIDS epidemic, and how the discourse of  their vulnerability affects acts of coping and courage. A project of the  Institute for the African Child at Ohio University, The Children of Africa Confront AIDS cuts across disciplines and issues to focus on the world's most marginalized population group, the children of Africa.Editors Arvind Singhal and Stephen Howard join conversations between  humanitarian and political activists and academics, asking, “What shall  we do?†Such discourse occurs in African contexts ranging from a social  science classroom in Botswana to youth groups in Kenya and Ghana. The  authors describe HIV/AIDS in its macro contexts of vulnerable children  and the continent's democratization movements and also in its national  contexts of civil conflict, rural poverty, youth organizations, and  agencies working on the ground.Singhal, Howard, and other contributors draw on compelling personal  experience in descriptions of HIV/AIDS interventions for children in  difficult circumstances and present thoughtful insights into data  gathered from surveys and observations concerning this terrible  epidemic.
											
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