TY - JOUR
T1 - Hiv/aids and constructs of gay community
T2 - Researching educational practice within community based health promotion for gay men
AU - Dowsett, Gary W.
AU - Bollen, Jonathan
AU - McInnes, David
AU - Couch, Murray
AU - Edwards, Barry
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - This paper reports on the methodology of a comparative study of three gay communities in Australia as they struggle with HIV/AIDS. The study focused on the pedagogy and practice of HIV/AIDS education for disease prevention and for health maintenance for people living with HIV/AIDS, through the investigation of three problematics: (1) constructs of ‘community’; (2) the centrality of gay community-based health educators; and (3) the relations of gay men within and to their communities. The study was conceived of as a critical ethnography involving a three-part sample in the three sites and using three related research methods: (1) individual and group interviews; (2) textual analysis; and (3) participant observation. The theoretical bases for the study and its design lay in notions of ‘performativity’, community and adult education, organizational and institutional processes, and the idea of a ‘post-AIDS’ sociality. The methodology is explained in detail, as are various consultative processes embedded in the design to facilitate and enable a productive relationship with the communities researched.
AB - This paper reports on the methodology of a comparative study of three gay communities in Australia as they struggle with HIV/AIDS. The study focused on the pedagogy and practice of HIV/AIDS education for disease prevention and for health maintenance for people living with HIV/AIDS, through the investigation of three problematics: (1) constructs of ‘community’; (2) the centrality of gay community-based health educators; and (3) the relations of gay men within and to their communities. The study was conceived of as a critical ethnography involving a three-part sample in the three sites and using three related research methods: (1) individual and group interviews; (2) textual analysis; and (3) participant observation. The theoretical bases for the study and its design lay in notions of ‘performativity’, community and adult education, organizational and institutional processes, and the idea of a ‘post-AIDS’ sociality. The methodology is explained in detail, as are various consultative processes embedded in the design to facilitate and enable a productive relationship with the communities researched.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85011128635&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13645570121259
DO - 10.1080/13645570121259
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85011128635
SN - 1364-5579
VL - 4
SP - 205
EP - 223
JO - International Journal of Social Research Methodology
JF - International Journal of Social Research Methodology
IS - 3
ER -