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POPULATION MOBILITY (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   095883


Fundamentals of China's urbanization and policy / Chan, Kam Wing   Journal Article
Chan, Kam Wing Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This paper analyses the fundamentals of China's urbanization in the last two decades, focusing on the administrative and economic structures and policy which form the basis of the configuration of China's urban system and urbanization policy.
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2
ID:   124510


HIV, population mobility, and the post-conflict nexus: unpackin / Vearey, Jo   Journal Article
Vearey, Jo Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract As with many issues associated with the movement of people, linkages between mobility, HIV, conflict and post-conflict settings have often been based on conjecture rather than fact. Conflict was assumed to increase transmission of HIV, and displaced populations, refugees and armed forces were presumed to have higher HIV prevalence than host communities. However, recent evidence challenges these assumptions. This article explores the complex relationship between HIV and post-conflict settings, and considers if and how migrants and mobile populations - including returning refugees - are at increased risk of HIV acquisition in post-conflict settings.
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3
ID:   124511


Homosexuality, sex work, and HIV/AIDS in displacement and post-: the case of refugees in Uganda / Nyanzi, Stella   Journal Article
Nyanzi, Stella Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article aims to disrupt the silence, invisibility and erasures of non-heteronormative sexual orientations or gender identities, and of sex work, in HIV/AIDS responses within displacement and post-conflict settings in Africa. Informed by Gayle Rubin's sexual hierarchy theoretical framework,1 it explores the role of discrimination and violation of the rights of sex workers and of gender and sexual minorities in driving the HIV/AIDS epidemic during displacement. Specific case materials focus on ethnographic research conducted in urban and rural Uganda. Recommendations for policy, practice and programmes are outlined.
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