Pastors as leaders in Africa's religious AIDS mobilisation: cases from Ghana and Zambia

This article examines the ways that pastors have mobilised their religious followers to address the issue of HIV and AIDS in Ghana and Zambia. The work argues that successful pastors have utilised church organisational structures to support and empower their activities, they have framed HIV and AIDS...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of African studies 2013-08, Vol.47 (2), p.207-226
1. Verfasser: Patterson, Amy S.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article examines the ways that pastors have mobilised their religious followers to address the issue of HIV and AIDS in Ghana and Zambia. The work argues that successful pastors have utilised church organisational structures to support and empower their activities, they have framed HIV and AIDS mobilisation messages in a way that is acceptable to their congregants and to their broader societies, and they have capitalised on changing political opportunities, particularly those opportunities for collaboration with external actors such as donors and Western churches. The work situates the analysis in Zambia and Ghana, two countries that contrast in their HIV prevalence rates and the amount of donor attention and funding they have received for combating HIV and AIDS. The article asserts that while pastors have agency in the social mobilisation process, they are also affected by the broader social and cultural contexts in which they operate.
ISSN:0008-3968
1923-3051
DOI:10.1080/00083968.2013.829949