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Canadian Aboriginal people's experiences with HIV/AIDS as portrayed in selected English language Aboriginal media (1996-2000)

Juanne N. Clarke, Daniela B. Friedman and Laurie Hoffman-Goetz

Social Science & Medicine, 2005, vol. 60, issue 10, 2169-2180

Abstract: This paper describes the portrayal of HIV/AIDS in 14 mass print newspapers directed towards the Canadian Aboriginal population and published between 1996 and 2000. Based on qualitative content analysis the research examines both manifest and latent meanings. Manifest results of this study indicate that women and youth are under represented as persons with HIV/AIDS. The latent results note the frequent references to Aboriginal culture, and the political and economic position of Aboriginal Canadians when discussing the disease, the person with the disease, the fear of the disease and the reaction of the community to the person with the disease. Unlike mainstream media where the medical frame is dominant, HIV/AIDS are here contextualized by culture, identity, spirituality and political-economic issues.

Keywords: Print; media; HIV/AIDS; Canadian; Aboriginal; populations; Stigmatization; Canada (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005
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