HIV Prevention with Latinos
Theory, Research, and Practice
Herausgeber: Organista, Kurt C
HIV Prevention with Latinos
Theory, Research, and Practice
Herausgeber: Organista, Kurt C
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This is a timely and urgently needed effort by the best researchers and interventionists in the field today. Latino-serving agencies and professionals, as well as the growing number of Latino-focused HIV prevention researchers, graduate students, and faculty, will find this an invaluable resource, reference, and guide.
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This is a timely and urgently needed effort by the best researchers and interventionists in the field today. Latino-serving agencies and professionals, as well as the growing number of Latino-focused HIV prevention researchers, graduate students, and faculty, will find this an invaluable resource, reference, and guide.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Juli 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 155mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9780199764303
- ISBN-10: 0199764301
- Artikelnr.: 35204318
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Juli 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 155mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9780199764303
- ISBN-10: 0199764301
- Artikelnr.: 35204318
Kurt C. Organista, PhD, is Professor at the School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley.
* Foreword
* Sandra R. Hernandez
* Introduction
* Kurt C. Organista
* 1. The Urgent Need for Structural Environmental Models of HIV Risk
and Prevention in US Latino Populations: The Case of Migrant Day
Laborers
* Kurt C. Organista, Paula Worby, Jim Quesada, Alex Kral, Rafael Diaz,
Torsten Neilands, and Sonya Arreola
* 2. Enhancing Peer Norms, Self-Efficacy, Self Esteem, and Social
Support for Safe Sex in Naturalistic Environments: The Role of
Community Involvement in Latino Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Communities
* Jesus Ramirez-Valles, Lisa M. Kuhns, and Haiyan Li
* 3. Sexual Culture, Structure, and Change: A Transnational Framework
for Studies of Latino Migration and HIV
* Héctor Carrillo
* 4. Love, Sex and Power Revisited: The Integration of a Gendered
Context in HIV Prevention among Latinas
* Monica D. Ulibarri, Anita Raj, and Hortensia Amaro
* 5. Demonstrated Effectiveness and Potential of Community-Based
Participatory Research for Preventing HIV in Latino Populations
* Scott Rhodes
* 6. Mexico-US Migration, Social Exclusion, and HIV risk:
Multi-sectoral Approaches to Understanding and Preventing Infection
* Jennifer S. Hirsch and Emily Vasquez
* 7. Inequality, Discrimination and HIV Risk: A Review of Research on
Latino Gay Men
* Rafael M. Díaz, Jorge Sánchez, and Kurt Schroeder
* 8. Homophobia, Racism, Financial Hardship and AIDS: Unpacking the
Effects of Social Discrimination on the Sexual Risk for HIV among
Latino Gay Men
* George Ayala
* 9. Contextual Influences of Sexual Risk among Latino MSM
* Maria Cecilia Zea, Carol A. Reisen, Fernanda T. Bianchi, and Paul J.
Poppen
* 10. Clean Sweeps and Social Control in Latino Bisexual Male Sex
Markets in New York City
* Edgar Rivera Colón, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, and Diana Hernández
* 11. Latina Transgender Women: The Social Context of HIV Risk and
Responsive Multi-level Prevention Capacity Building
* Frank Galvan and Joanne Keatley
* 12. HIV Risk and Prevention for Latinos in Jails and Prisons
* Megan Comfort, Carmen Albizu-García, Timoteo Rodriguez, and Carlos
Molina III
* 13. Puerto Rican Heterosexual Serodiscordant Couples: Cultural
Challenges for Healthy Dyads
* Sheilla Rodríguez-Madera and Nelson Varas-Díaz
* 14. HIV/STI Risk among Latino Migrant Men in New Receiving
Communities: A Case Study of Post-disaster New Orleans
* Patricia Kissinger and Michele G. Shedlin
* 15. Reducing HIV Sexual Risk for Latino Adolescents: An
Ecodevelopmental Perspective
* Antonia M. Villarruel, Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, and Jose Bauermeister
* 16. Improving Latina Intergenerational Family-Based Communication to
Decrease HIV and Other Sexual Risks
* Britt Rios-Ellis
* 17. The Landscape of Latina HIV Prevention Interventions and their
Implementation: Cultural Sensitivity in Community Based Organizations
* Miriam Y. Vega and Lina Cherfas
* 18. Interventions to Prevent HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted
Diseases among Latino Migrants
* Thomas M. Painter, Kurt C. Organista, Scott D. Rhodes, and Fernando
M. Sañudo
* 19. HIV Prevention Interventions with Puerto Rican Injection Drug
Users
* Lisa de Saxe Zerden, Luz Marilis López, and Lena Lundgre
* Index
* Sandra R. Hernandez
* Introduction
* Kurt C. Organista
* 1. The Urgent Need for Structural Environmental Models of HIV Risk
and Prevention in US Latino Populations: The Case of Migrant Day
Laborers
* Kurt C. Organista, Paula Worby, Jim Quesada, Alex Kral, Rafael Diaz,
Torsten Neilands, and Sonya Arreola
* 2. Enhancing Peer Norms, Self-Efficacy, Self Esteem, and Social
Support for Safe Sex in Naturalistic Environments: The Role of
Community Involvement in Latino Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Communities
* Jesus Ramirez-Valles, Lisa M. Kuhns, and Haiyan Li
* 3. Sexual Culture, Structure, and Change: A Transnational Framework
for Studies of Latino Migration and HIV
* Héctor Carrillo
* 4. Love, Sex and Power Revisited: The Integration of a Gendered
Context in HIV Prevention among Latinas
* Monica D. Ulibarri, Anita Raj, and Hortensia Amaro
* 5. Demonstrated Effectiveness and Potential of Community-Based
Participatory Research for Preventing HIV in Latino Populations
* Scott Rhodes
* 6. Mexico-US Migration, Social Exclusion, and HIV risk:
Multi-sectoral Approaches to Understanding and Preventing Infection
* Jennifer S. Hirsch and Emily Vasquez
* 7. Inequality, Discrimination and HIV Risk: A Review of Research on
Latino Gay Men
* Rafael M. Díaz, Jorge Sánchez, and Kurt Schroeder
* 8. Homophobia, Racism, Financial Hardship and AIDS: Unpacking the
Effects of Social Discrimination on the Sexual Risk for HIV among
Latino Gay Men
* George Ayala
* 9. Contextual Influences of Sexual Risk among Latino MSM
* Maria Cecilia Zea, Carol A. Reisen, Fernanda T. Bianchi, and Paul J.
Poppen
* 10. Clean Sweeps and Social Control in Latino Bisexual Male Sex
Markets in New York City
* Edgar Rivera Colón, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, and Diana Hernández
* 11. Latina Transgender Women: The Social Context of HIV Risk and
Responsive Multi-level Prevention Capacity Building
* Frank Galvan and Joanne Keatley
* 12. HIV Risk and Prevention for Latinos in Jails and Prisons
* Megan Comfort, Carmen Albizu-García, Timoteo Rodriguez, and Carlos
Molina III
* 13. Puerto Rican Heterosexual Serodiscordant Couples: Cultural
Challenges for Healthy Dyads
* Sheilla Rodríguez-Madera and Nelson Varas-Díaz
* 14. HIV/STI Risk among Latino Migrant Men in New Receiving
Communities: A Case Study of Post-disaster New Orleans
* Patricia Kissinger and Michele G. Shedlin
* 15. Reducing HIV Sexual Risk for Latino Adolescents: An
Ecodevelopmental Perspective
* Antonia M. Villarruel, Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, and Jose Bauermeister
* 16. Improving Latina Intergenerational Family-Based Communication to
Decrease HIV and Other Sexual Risks
* Britt Rios-Ellis
* 17. The Landscape of Latina HIV Prevention Interventions and their
Implementation: Cultural Sensitivity in Community Based Organizations
* Miriam Y. Vega and Lina Cherfas
* 18. Interventions to Prevent HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted
Diseases among Latino Migrants
* Thomas M. Painter, Kurt C. Organista, Scott D. Rhodes, and Fernando
M. Sañudo
* 19. HIV Prevention Interventions with Puerto Rican Injection Drug
Users
* Lisa de Saxe Zerden, Luz Marilis López, and Lena Lundgre
* Index
* Foreword
* Sandra R. Hernandez
* Introduction
* Kurt C. Organista
* 1. The Urgent Need for Structural Environmental Models of HIV Risk
and Prevention in US Latino Populations: The Case of Migrant Day
Laborers
* Kurt C. Organista, Paula Worby, Jim Quesada, Alex Kral, Rafael Diaz,
Torsten Neilands, and Sonya Arreola
* 2. Enhancing Peer Norms, Self-Efficacy, Self Esteem, and Social
Support for Safe Sex in Naturalistic Environments: The Role of
Community Involvement in Latino Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Communities
* Jesus Ramirez-Valles, Lisa M. Kuhns, and Haiyan Li
* 3. Sexual Culture, Structure, and Change: A Transnational Framework
for Studies of Latino Migration and HIV
* Héctor Carrillo
* 4. Love, Sex and Power Revisited: The Integration of a Gendered
Context in HIV Prevention among Latinas
* Monica D. Ulibarri, Anita Raj, and Hortensia Amaro
* 5. Demonstrated Effectiveness and Potential of Community-Based
Participatory Research for Preventing HIV in Latino Populations
* Scott Rhodes
* 6. Mexico-US Migration, Social Exclusion, and HIV risk:
Multi-sectoral Approaches to Understanding and Preventing Infection
* Jennifer S. Hirsch and Emily Vasquez
* 7. Inequality, Discrimination and HIV Risk: A Review of Research on
Latino Gay Men
* Rafael M. Díaz, Jorge Sánchez, and Kurt Schroeder
* 8. Homophobia, Racism, Financial Hardship and AIDS: Unpacking the
Effects of Social Discrimination on the Sexual Risk for HIV among
Latino Gay Men
* George Ayala
* 9. Contextual Influences of Sexual Risk among Latino MSM
* Maria Cecilia Zea, Carol A. Reisen, Fernanda T. Bianchi, and Paul J.
Poppen
* 10. Clean Sweeps and Social Control in Latino Bisexual Male Sex
Markets in New York City
* Edgar Rivera Colón, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, and Diana Hernández
* 11. Latina Transgender Women: The Social Context of HIV Risk and
Responsive Multi-level Prevention Capacity Building
* Frank Galvan and Joanne Keatley
* 12. HIV Risk and Prevention for Latinos in Jails and Prisons
* Megan Comfort, Carmen Albizu-García, Timoteo Rodriguez, and Carlos
Molina III
* 13. Puerto Rican Heterosexual Serodiscordant Couples: Cultural
Challenges for Healthy Dyads
* Sheilla Rodríguez-Madera and Nelson Varas-Díaz
* 14. HIV/STI Risk among Latino Migrant Men in New Receiving
Communities: A Case Study of Post-disaster New Orleans
* Patricia Kissinger and Michele G. Shedlin
* 15. Reducing HIV Sexual Risk for Latino Adolescents: An
Ecodevelopmental Perspective
* Antonia M. Villarruel, Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, and Jose Bauermeister
* 16. Improving Latina Intergenerational Family-Based Communication to
Decrease HIV and Other Sexual Risks
* Britt Rios-Ellis
* 17. The Landscape of Latina HIV Prevention Interventions and their
Implementation: Cultural Sensitivity in Community Based Organizations
* Miriam Y. Vega and Lina Cherfas
* 18. Interventions to Prevent HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted
Diseases among Latino Migrants
* Thomas M. Painter, Kurt C. Organista, Scott D. Rhodes, and Fernando
M. Sañudo
* 19. HIV Prevention Interventions with Puerto Rican Injection Drug
Users
* Lisa de Saxe Zerden, Luz Marilis López, and Lena Lundgre
* Index
* Sandra R. Hernandez
* Introduction
* Kurt C. Organista
* 1. The Urgent Need for Structural Environmental Models of HIV Risk
and Prevention in US Latino Populations: The Case of Migrant Day
Laborers
* Kurt C. Organista, Paula Worby, Jim Quesada, Alex Kral, Rafael Diaz,
Torsten Neilands, and Sonya Arreola
* 2. Enhancing Peer Norms, Self-Efficacy, Self Esteem, and Social
Support for Safe Sex in Naturalistic Environments: The Role of
Community Involvement in Latino Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Communities
* Jesus Ramirez-Valles, Lisa M. Kuhns, and Haiyan Li
* 3. Sexual Culture, Structure, and Change: A Transnational Framework
for Studies of Latino Migration and HIV
* Héctor Carrillo
* 4. Love, Sex and Power Revisited: The Integration of a Gendered
Context in HIV Prevention among Latinas
* Monica D. Ulibarri, Anita Raj, and Hortensia Amaro
* 5. Demonstrated Effectiveness and Potential of Community-Based
Participatory Research for Preventing HIV in Latino Populations
* Scott Rhodes
* 6. Mexico-US Migration, Social Exclusion, and HIV risk:
Multi-sectoral Approaches to Understanding and Preventing Infection
* Jennifer S. Hirsch and Emily Vasquez
* 7. Inequality, Discrimination and HIV Risk: A Review of Research on
Latino Gay Men
* Rafael M. Díaz, Jorge Sánchez, and Kurt Schroeder
* 8. Homophobia, Racism, Financial Hardship and AIDS: Unpacking the
Effects of Social Discrimination on the Sexual Risk for HIV among
Latino Gay Men
* George Ayala
* 9. Contextual Influences of Sexual Risk among Latino MSM
* Maria Cecilia Zea, Carol A. Reisen, Fernanda T. Bianchi, and Paul J.
Poppen
* 10. Clean Sweeps and Social Control in Latino Bisexual Male Sex
Markets in New York City
* Edgar Rivera Colón, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, and Diana Hernández
* 11. Latina Transgender Women: The Social Context of HIV Risk and
Responsive Multi-level Prevention Capacity Building
* Frank Galvan and Joanne Keatley
* 12. HIV Risk and Prevention for Latinos in Jails and Prisons
* Megan Comfort, Carmen Albizu-García, Timoteo Rodriguez, and Carlos
Molina III
* 13. Puerto Rican Heterosexual Serodiscordant Couples: Cultural
Challenges for Healthy Dyads
* Sheilla Rodríguez-Madera and Nelson Varas-Díaz
* 14. HIV/STI Risk among Latino Migrant Men in New Receiving
Communities: A Case Study of Post-disaster New Orleans
* Patricia Kissinger and Michele G. Shedlin
* 15. Reducing HIV Sexual Risk for Latino Adolescents: An
Ecodevelopmental Perspective
* Antonia M. Villarruel, Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, and Jose Bauermeister
* 16. Improving Latina Intergenerational Family-Based Communication to
Decrease HIV and Other Sexual Risks
* Britt Rios-Ellis
* 17. The Landscape of Latina HIV Prevention Interventions and their
Implementation: Cultural Sensitivity in Community Based Organizations
* Miriam Y. Vega and Lina Cherfas
* 18. Interventions to Prevent HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted
Diseases among Latino Migrants
* Thomas M. Painter, Kurt C. Organista, Scott D. Rhodes, and Fernando
M. Sañudo
* 19. HIV Prevention Interventions with Puerto Rican Injection Drug
Users
* Lisa de Saxe Zerden, Luz Marilis López, and Lena Lundgre
* Index