Faith Communities Engage the HIV/AIDS Crisis: Lessons Learned and Paths Forward
Creator
Unknown authorAbstract
This report reviews the work of faith-inspired leaders and communities in both global and country-specific efforts to combat HIV/AIDS. It is directed both to practitioners and to academics, to those from faith-inspired communities interested in deepening their engagement with HIV/AIDS, and to secular development workers interested in exploring further contacts with faith communities in their work on HIV/AIDS. The report is funded in part by the Luce Foundation and part of a series designed to illuminate the little-understood role that religious actors play in global development.
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http://hdl.handle.net/10822/1052206Date Published
2007-10-01Rights
Copyright Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs. Permission is granted for educational uses only. For other uses, please contact the center at berkleycenter@georgetown.edu for information about permissions.
Subject
Religion and Development; Collaboration with Luce Foundation; Gender; Intercultural and Interreligious Dialogue; Catholic Church and the World; Family Planning and Reproductive Health; Gender and Sexual Identity; Human Rights; Community Engagement; Economics; Conflict; Education; Health Care; HIV/AIDS; Islam and Gender; Marriage; Orphans; Proselytism; Violence Against Women; Global Health;
Publisher
Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs
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Faith Communities Engage the HIV/AIDS Crisis: Lessons Learned and Paths Forward
Unknown author (Keough, Lucy; Marshall, Katherine, 2007-09)