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YOUTH RESPONSES AROUND THE WORLD
You've just read about conversations with youth and youth workers
on what is and what should be happening on the HIV/AIDS scene
in Canada. We will now look briefly at how youth in other countries
are responding to the global crisis, and list some pointers for
initiating a successful youth and HIV/AIDS project. Perhaps reading
about what has worked in other contexts will inspire you to "import"
and activate a model in your own area, or will spark a whole chain
of other ideas
REALITY CHECK
At the end of 2001, 12 million young people were living with
HIV/AIDS and more than 7000 youth have become newly infected each
day since.
What do these figures really mean? What do they mean for young
people in the most seriously affected areas - for example, in
sub-Saharan Africa where more than 70% of HIV-positive youth live?
Well, if a medium to large high school in Canada has about 1500
students, that's more than 4 high schools per day in which the
entire student population becomes HIV-positive. And that's just
young people.
GLOBAL TARGETS
The news is not all discouraging. With strong national strategies,
combining the efforts and expertise of government, private sector,
and NGOs, countries like Brazil, Thailand, Uganda, and Senegal
are turning the epidemic around in their countries. For example,
Thailand has reduced its infection rate from 140,000 per year
a decade ago to 30,000 per year now. In Uganda, HIV prevalence
among pregnant women has fallen from 29% in 1992 to 11% in 2000.
There is growing global momentum too. World leaders agreed to
pursue common targets at the United Nations General Assembly Special
Session (UNGASS) on HIV/AIDS in June of 2001; and in August of
2001, youth leaders at the Fourth World Youth Forum in Dakar,
Senegal - in slightly stronger language - called upon governments
to fulfil these commitments with the participation of youth and
civil society.
In the Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS, Member States of
the UN declared the global HIV/AIDS epidemic a "global emergency"
and agreed to:
- develop and implement, with the participation of youth, national
strategies for combating HIV/AIDS including financing plans
(by 2003)
- reduce HIV prevalence by 25% among youth aged 15-24 (by 2010)
- ensure that 90% of youth aged 15-24 have access to information,
education, and services necessary to reduce their vulnerability
to HIV infection (by 2005)
YOUTH STRATEGIES
Youth everywhere are already responding to the HIV/AIDS crisis
- in youth to youth initiatives and outreach to the broader community,
at local, national, regional, and global levels. Here are a few
examples.
Turning the tables
u kenya
Africa Alive! is a network of African youth organizations promoting
AIDS prevention and safe sexual behaviour through the medium of
popular entertainment. The prevention message is integrated in
comics, music lyrics, public service announcements with entertainers,
articles in newspapers and magazines, and TV shows, to name a
few.
In Kenya, while 14% of the adult population (ages 15-49) was
HIV-positive at the end of 1999, prevalence among specific populations
(e.g. pregnant women, youth, sex workers) can be much higher.
Among tested sex workers in Nairobi, HIV prevalence is extremely
high: 62% in 1985, rising to 82% by 1992.
Africa Alive!'s Kenya chapter saw that DJs were uniquely placed
to reach youth with key messages on reducing risky behaviour.
They work in nightclubs: places where young people - male and
female - congregate, drink, mix, dance, and possibly meet new
sexual partners. DJs are the driving force behind the medium of
entertainment - and tend to be role models too.
After attending a training workshop on integrating HIV/AIDS prevention
messages into their shows, club DJs in Mombasa, Nairobi, Kisumu,
and Eldoret have started bringing those messages to some of the
hotspots for urban nightlife. Preliminary results have shown that
in the relaxed and fun atmosphere of a nightclub, youth audiences
are open to the message.
Web address: www.africaalive.org
Respect and credibility are important when it comes to communicating
with youth. Being a role model is one way. Having firsthand experience
of the issues is another. Edwin Odera, a young person living with
HIV/AIDS, spearheaded a campaign for students to establish and
run Anti-AIDS clubs in their schools. Working with the Kenya Society
for People with AIDS (KEPSA) in western Kenya, Odera inspired
thousands of students to link with each other in schools and direct
their own actions on HIV/AIDS. Odera died of AIDS in June 1997,
but his campaign is carried on by KEPSA.
Web address:
www.annea.or.tz
From outrage to action
u united states
Just as students and young people in the US have mobilized in
the past to protest war, apartheid, and civil rights abuses, the
Student Global AIDS Campaign (SGAC) is organizing youth in the
US to fight the global HIV/AIDS pandemic - by taking aim at their
own government's policies.
While only 3.79% of the 40 million people living with HIV/AIDS
are from the developed world, the vast majority of annual HIV/AIDS
expenditures is still spent in wealthy, industrialized countries
like the US.
Coordinated advocacy, education, training, and direct action
by hundreds of members across the country push for vastly increased
US global AIDS spending, total bilateral and multilateral debt
cancellation, and guaranteed access to treatment and care.
A straightforward "What Can I Do?" list on their website
encourages members (and site visitors) to communicate with their
elected officials, become an active member of a local branch of
SGAC, do media outreach work, organize a regional conference,
or become a 'national leader' of the campaign by strategizing
and leading national work on topics ranging from lobbying to chapter
development, research and education, and international partnerships.
Web address: www.fightglobalaids.org
Dead men don't play
u south africa
Soccer is somewhat unique in having mass male participation,
as both players and supporters, and particularly among the age
range that is most vulnerable to HIV infection: young men. It
is played and has widespread appeal in both rural and urban areas.
And it receives a tremendous amount of media coverage. These are
the ingredients for a powerful public education campaign.
In South Africa, a woman is leading teams of young male soccer
players engaged in the Shosholoza Programme. Gethwana Makhaye
started her HIV/AIDS work with women, but soon realized that awareness
raising and behaviour change initiatives targeted only to women
were missing an important part of the equation. The young male
players engaged in her programme undergo training to become peer
educators - a training regimen involving counselling, group work,
even sewing - and then speak when or wherever they can to others
about HIV/AIDS prevention, sexuality, and gender equality, encouraging
those around them to change their behaviour by way of example.
At the end of 1999, already 20% of the adult population in South
Africa was HIV-positive and current prevalence among youth is
thought to be still higher. In the province where Makhaye works,
KwaZulu-Natal, 36.2% of pregnant women attending antenatal clinics
in 2000 were HIV-positive.
In this climate, there are strong reasons for these ambitious
youth to train with Shosholoza and to heed the prevention messages.
The programme is clear on this: they won't be able to play with
the revered national team, Bafana Bafana, if they're dead.
Youth in showbiz
u bangladesh
A recent study in Bangladesh found that 96% of girls and 88%
of boys between the ages of 15 and 19 did not know of any way
to protect themselves against HIV infection. Prevention education
efforts are not working.
Youth volunteers with the Family Planning Association of Bangladesh
(FPAB) are experimenting with using mass media as a means of reaching
young people: they are in the business of making TV shows that
will help carry important health information to a mass audience.
Following the success of several radio and TV talk show programmes
on adolescent sexual and reproductive health, FPAB decided to
produce a seven-episode TV drama incorporating HIV/AIDS issues
and other social and health topics of concern to young people.
This time though, young people played a key role in designing
the series, making sure that messages communicated through the
script were youth-friendly, relevant to both urban and rural youth
needs, and appealing. The new approach worked: after airing, 60,000
viewers wrote in to comment on the series.
Web address: www.ippf.org
The writing's on the wall
u canada
One of the significant and emerging risks among youth in Canada
is a sense of invincibility vis-à-vis HIV/AIDS. Some youth
feel that drug therapies will save them - and their quality of
life - if they become HIV-positive, and others believe that HIV/AIDS
is only a risk for certain groups. But all youth are at risk of
HIV infection. Prevention education is clearly still a necessity,
and the need for it is growing.
The Canadian AIDS Society (CAS), a national coalition of community-based
AIDS organizations, is experimenting with using art - graffiti
mural art - to engage and educate youth in HIV/AIDS prevention,
and to get youth to educate others through art. In collaboration
with a professional artists' collective, CAS is launching an HIV/AIDS
graffiti project to empower the youth involved in creating the
mural and to bring a powerful prevention message to a much wider
audience through public art.
Youth are involved in all aspects of the project from planning
and fundraising to publicity and evaluation. And 'expression'
is not restricted to the graffiti art itself. Project participants
are responsible for producing communications and promotional materials
(including newspaper articles, posters, rave cards), planning
and carrying out the graffiti work, and launching the mural. The
preliminary 5-day workshop focuses on HIV/AIDS education - ensuring
that this theme informs their graffiti work - as well as practical
art training.
Web address:
www.cdnaids.ca
WHAT WORKS? LESSONS FROM 20 YEARS OF PRACTICE
The above are just of few of the diverse examples of how youth
are effectively responding to the global HIV/AIDS crisis. What
do these examples have in common and what do you need to know
to ensure that your initiative can be effective too?
In 2001, UNESCO and UNAIDS prepared a guidebook for youth organizations
on HIV/AIDS and human rights, focusing on public education, peer
education, advocacy, and care and support initiatives. They found
that the most successful programmes in these theme areas share
the following characteristics:
- they involve people living with HIV, and the wider community,
in all stages (in planning, implementation and evaluation)
- they recognize the realities that people face in their daily
lives, and take people's own needs and interests as a starting
point (rather than, for example, start from their own assumptions
about people's knowledge, beliefs or attitudes)
- they create open attitudes and accept how people are (rather
than be critical or judgemental)
- they use positive images and friendly messages (not frightening
or authoritarian)
- they develop skills and knowledge (rather than tell people
what to do)
- they win support from people in positions of authority (for
example teachers, doctors, religious leaders, professional associations,
government officials)
- they recognize that even well planned approaches sometimes
fail (and, therefore, review progress and adjust the programme
when needed)
- they carry out some form of evaluation, however brief (so
that the activity can be replicated or improved by the same
group or by others in the future)
If your planned initiative is a public education campaign, they
recommend that you:
- consult and involve relevant community groups, including people
living with HIV/AIDS
- make your messages short, direct, and adapted to the target
group's lifestyle and motivations
- test images and messages by getting reactions from a representative
sample of people
- be provocative and controversial if needed, but avoid offending
others
- present positive images; remember that people living with
HIV and AIDS have the right to lead full lives for a long time
- aim to motivate people - this works better than telling them
what they have to do
OUT THERE
So, what now? Well - we hope that this report has increased your
understanding of the global HIV/AIDS crisis. And even more so,
we hope that you are inspired to get up and get going in the fight
against HIV/AIDS. Be unique in the way that you get involved -
"off the wall" (though still well planned!) ideas are
sometimes the most effective.
Keep up-to-date on what's happening: on the global HIV/AIDS situation,
what youth are doing globally, what your government is doing,
and what initiatives are taking place in your own community.
And finally - though it really comes first - continue to challenge
and change your own behaviour and attitudes.
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