This article highlights how African men and women
in South Africa account for the plausibility of alternative beliefs about the
origins of HIV and the existence of a cure. This study draws on the notion of a
"street-level epistemology of trust"-knowledge generated by
individuals through their everyday observations and experiences-to account for
individuals' trust or mistrust of official claims versus alternative
explanations about HIV and AIDS.
Focus group respondents describe how past
experiences, combined with observations about the power of scientific
developments and perceptions of disjunctures in information, fuel their
uncertainty and skepticism about official claims.
HIV prevention campaigns may
be strengthened by drawing on experiential aspects of HIV and AIDS to lend
credibility to scientific claims, while recognizing that some doubts about the
trustworthiness of scientific evidence are a form of skeptical engagement
rather than of outright rejection.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/J1K2bW
By: Rubincam C1.
- 1University of Toronto, Canada c.c.rubincam@gmail.com.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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