Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://cris.library.msu.ac.zw//handle/11408/1687
Title: | The fallacy of participation in behaviour change programming: the case of Gweru Women AIDS Prevention Association (GWAPA), Zimbabwe | Authors: | Mushuku, Patience Priscilla | Keywords: | Participation, Commercial sex work, Empowerment | Issue Date: | 2013 | Publisher: | David Publishing | Series/Report no.: | Journalism and Mass Communication;Vol. 3, No. 11, p. 733-747 | Abstract: | Gweru Women AIDS Prevention Association (GWAPA) is an organization that works with commercial sex-workers in the Midlands Province to try and stymie the tide of HIV/AIDS. The organization premises its activities upon the belief that sex workers are forced into prostitution by poverty and thus offers them alternative livelihood strategies such as piggery projects, chicken rearing, and vegetable vending projects as well as seed money with which to start flea market projects. The organization also runs a condom promotion project, a legal literacy project, and an advocacy project, all in a bid to empower the sex workers cognitively. The study was carried out between April and October 2008, using bar-based observations, interviews, focus group discussions, and documentary evidence. The study found participation to have been more of a fallacy in as far as programming depended more on the whims of donor funders than the actual needs of programme beneficiaries. In the top-down manner that is typical of development communication, the organization would engage donors and secure funding for certain projects which they would then try to convince the sex workers to take up, with mixed results. The research also found limited evidence of real empowerment of beneficiaries in the long run, with the sex workers themselves insisting that the ―piece-meal‖ efforts of the organization were not sustainable enough to induce them to abandon sex work altogether. The study did, however, find that the organization and its programming had actually managed to score notable success in promoting safer sex within the context of prostitution, albeit without eradicating sex work altogether. | URI: | http://www.davidpublishing.com/DownLoad/?id=15252 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1687 |
ISSN: | 2160-6579 |
Appears in Collections: | Research Papers |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mushuku P..pdf | 176.88 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Page view(s)
56
checked on Nov 22, 2024
Download(s)
26
checked on Nov 22, 2024
Google ScholarTM
Check
Items in MSUIR are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.