From Health Crisis to Rights Advocacy? HIV/AIDS and Gay Activism in China and Singapore

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Abstract

The relationship between HIV/AIDS and gay activism has been primarily informed by the American experience and understudied in nondemocratic contexts. Drawing upon qualitative research on China and Singapore, we refine understanding of HIV/AIDS’ influence on the development of gay activism under authoritarian conditions, by examining the processes through which activist organizations interact with laws and regulations, political norms, HIV/AIDS funding, and government responses to both HIV/AIDS and collective organizing. We show how HIV/AIDS’ influence plays out in multiple patterns, depending on the strategic responses that gay activists select from a constrained range of options to shape their organizations’ destinies. Therefore, we provide insights for development agencies and international donors into whether and how international assistance intended to encourage activism and wider social change are mediated by political and legal controls on local activism.

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Chua, L. J., & Hildebrandt, T. (2014). From Health Crisis to Rights Advocacy? HIV/AIDS and Gay Activism in China and Singapore. Voluntas, 25(6), 1583–1605. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11266-013-9429-7

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