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The AIDS Disaster: The Failure of Organizations in New York and the Nations
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Bibliographic Detail
Publisher Yale Univ Pr
Publication date October 24, 1990
Binding Paperback
Book category Adult Non-Fiction
ISBN-13 9780300048803
ISBN-10 0300048807
Dimensions 0.75 by 5.50 by 8.25 in.
Weight 0.65 lbs.
Original list price $24.00
Other format details university press
Summaries and Reviews
Summary
Outlines how government and private organizations have inadequately addressed the AIDS issue because of the attitude of society toward the population groups most affected by the disease
Amazon.com description: Product Description:

The seriousness, potential dimensions, and likely victims of the AIDS epidemic were known as early as 1981, yet the reaction of public and private organizations was shockingly slow and feeble and is even now woefully inadequate.  Basing their analysis largely on the hardest hit city, New York, Charles Perrow and Mauro Guillén deliver a passionate, yet well-documented indictment of governmental and private groups for failing to provide the necessary education and care in response to this disaster. 

 

In this controversial book the authors describe the patterns of denial, avoidance, and segregation that various organizations exhibited toward the AIDS crisis and its victims.  In so doing they extend our theories of organizational dynamics.  It is well known that society has an aversion to the major groups threatened or afflicted with AIDS—male homosexuals and, more recently, intravenous drug users and their sexual partners—and that the poor and members of the minorities contribute most heavily to the ranks of the drug users.  This situation, Perrow and Guillén argue, results in a stigma that makes AIDS unique among epidemics and contaminates the response of most organizations involved.  Society’s hostility toward the urban poor bears even more responsibility for the organizational mishandling of the crisis than the economic and ideological preoccupations of the Reagan era and the homophobia of lawmakers and establishment organizations.  The second wave of the epidemic, affecting intravenous drug users, and through them, crack users, interacts fatally with growing problems of poverty in the inner cities, where homelessness, joblessness, rising tuberculosis and syphilis rates, crime, and the paucity of strong indigenous community agencies all foster the rapid spread of the disease.

 

What is needed, the authors contend, is an all-out war on AIDS that attacks both sexual discrimination and poverty.  The AIDS epidemic, they claim, presents an occasion for redressing long-standing social injustices.



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Paperback
Book cover for 9780300048803
 
The price comparison is for this edition
from Yale Univ Pr (October 24, 1990)
9780300048803 | details & prices | 5.50 × 8.25 × 0.75 in. | 0.65 lbs | List price $24.00
About: Outlines how government and private organizations have inadequately addressed the AIDS issue because of the attitude of society toward the population groups most affected by the disease

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