Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town.

yes === This study focuses on a widely promoted belief that community-driven and community-based interventions for development are not only cost-effective, but also just and democratic. In particular, this study examines community-based initiatives with regard to HIV/AID...

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Main Author: Boesten, Jelke
Language:en
Published: International Centre for Participation 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3800
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-38002019-08-31T03:02:32Z Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town. Boesten, Jelke Community-driven development Community-based initiatives Development HIV/AIDS Tanzania Empowerment yes This study focuses on a widely promoted belief that community-driven and community-based interventions for development are not only cost-effective, but also just and democratic. In particular, this study examines community-based initiatives with regard to HIV/AIDS in one Tanzanian roadside town. The interventions I discuss suggest that increased community participation does not automatically lead to more equitable access to services, to the empowerment of the poor, or even to the planned service delivery at all. Dependence on local volunteers with multiple motives and interests can hamper the relationship between provider and beneficiary. A concern for minimal state involvement and maximum decentralisation can easily lead to institutional abandonment, and trust in an undefined `community¿ can prevent rather than encourage coordination at community-level. As I discuss below, such factors can result not only in a service not being delivered, but can also readily lead to increased local conflict over scarce resources, increasing unfulfilled expectations, affirmation of inequalities, and government neglect. In the absence of a strong institutional framework such as the state, community structures and social relationships ¿ unquantifiable and often particular to specific locations ¿ seem central to the functioning of community-based development interventions, including those of AIDS related prevention and care. DfID 2009-10-29T16:48:02Z 2009-10-29T16:48:02Z 2007 Working Paper published version paper Boesten, J. (2007). Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town. University of Bradford, Department of Peace Studies, International Centre for Participation Studies. ICPS Working Paper 4. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3800 en http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/icps/publications/papers/index.php © 2007 University of Bradford. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share-Alike License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/uk). International Centre for Participation
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Community-driven development
Community-based initiatives
Development
HIV/AIDS
Tanzania
Empowerment
spellingShingle Community-driven development
Community-based initiatives
Development
HIV/AIDS
Tanzania
Empowerment
Boesten, Jelke
Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town.
description yes === This study focuses on a widely promoted belief that community-driven and community-based interventions for development are not only cost-effective, but also just and democratic. In particular, this study examines community-based initiatives with regard to HIV/AIDS in one Tanzanian roadside town. The interventions I discuss suggest that increased community participation does not automatically lead to more equitable access to services, to the empowerment of the poor, or even to the planned service delivery at all. Dependence on local volunteers with multiple motives and interests can hamper the relationship between provider and beneficiary. A concern for minimal state involvement and maximum decentralisation can easily lead to institutional abandonment, and trust in an undefined `community¿ can prevent rather than encourage coordination at community-level. As I discuss below, such factors can result not only in a service not being delivered, but can also readily lead to increased local conflict over scarce resources, increasing unfulfilled expectations, affirmation of inequalities, and government neglect. In the absence of a strong institutional framework such as the state, community structures and social relationships ¿ unquantifiable and often particular to specific locations ¿ seem central to the functioning of community-based development interventions, including those of AIDS related prevention and care. === DfID
author Boesten, Jelke
author_facet Boesten, Jelke
author_sort Boesten, Jelke
title Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town.
title_short Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town.
title_full Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town.
title_fullStr Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town.
title_full_unstemmed Precarious future: Community volunteers and HIV/AIDS in a Tanzanian roadside town.
title_sort precarious future: community volunteers and hiv/aids in a tanzanian roadside town.
publisher International Centre for Participation
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3800
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