Gender and HIV & AIDS
Gender and HIV & AIDS
Gender and HIV & AIDS
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every year of additional schooling increases girls ability to make decisions affecting their sexual behaviour and increases their earning potential, two correlated factors that have been proven to significantly lower risk of HIV infection. Education is also correlated with key prevention attributes such as delayed sexual debut, increased condom use, and greater HIV awareness. Moreover, educational empowerment of women and girls leads to economic empowerment, which enables women to negotiate safer sex and relationships, and afford and access healthcare, HIV testing and antiretroviral treatment. In addition to UNESCOs ongoing education and HIV and AIDS related efforts, these priorities are being addressed through the UNAIDS Agenda for Accelerated Country Action for Women, Girls, Gender Equality and HIV (pdf), which supports country programmes and initiatives. Click here for new policy briefs on: Globalization and Womens Vulnerability to HIV & AIDS The Implications of HIV and AIDS on Womens Unpaid Labour Burden (both in pdf)
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2011 EFA Global Monitoring Report highlights maternal education and HIV prevention as key issues in attaining Education for All
maternal transmission of HIV. (See Summary PARIS The annual EFA Global Monitoring Report, Report graphic on the following page.) published by UNESCO, tracks the worlds progress The Report cites a marked difference in toward achieving the global goal of Education for awareness of transmission mechanisms associated All, established at the 1990 World Conference on with different levels of education Educ ation. HIV a nd AI DS as evidence that increased prevention and education have Knowledge is an indicator of education, especially for women been top priorities for achieving empowerment in its own EFA since the Dakar Framework right...This is especially true for and girls, could significantly HIV and AIDS. decrease infection rates. for Action was adopted in 2000. -2011 Global Monitoring Report The GMR also calls for meeting the This years Report, released 1 needs of HIV-positive students to March 2011, underscores the achieve EFA. In 2009 alone, 370,000 children under continued significance of education as a force for age 15 became infected with HIV and 260,000 died HIV prevention and for mitigating the impact of the due to AIDS-related illnesses. UNESCO prioritises epidemic on women and girls. Evidence from addressing both the health and educational needs of Malawi has provided a concrete testament to the these HIV-positive learners. importance of womens education in preventing
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NEW In addition to the eNewsletter, watch www.unesco.org/aids for a new design. LOOK!
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UNESCO/Bangkok
Participants at a regional sexuality education programming workshop and planning session held in October 2010.
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included the dilemma of disclosure, dealing with discrimination and stigma, 45 percent of new challenges meeting their health HIV infections needs in a school setting, and some occur among of the failures of the education 15-24 year olds. sector that prevent them In Sub-Saharan Africa, young achieving their academic women are eight times more aspirations. likely to be living with HIV The meeting and than their male peers. forthcoming report on recommendations for action Over 5 million young derive from UNESCOs people are living with HIV partnership with the Global today. Network of People Living Four million live in with HIV and International Sub-Saharan Africa. Planned Parenthood Federation.
Key Resources
Now on the Web and in Multiple Languages
Sexuality Education CD-ROM
This CD-ROM contains the key resources developed by UNESCOs programme on sexuality education and the resulting International Technical Guidance on Sexuality Education. This evidence-based approach for education and health professionals, was published in December 2009 in partnership with UNAIDS, UNFPA, UNICEF and WHO in: English, French, Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, Portuguese and Russian. The programme on sexuality education is designed to support the implementation of the UNESCO strategy on HIV and AIDS and fulfill UNESCOs lead technical role on HIV prevention with young people and in the area of education, in accordance with the updated UNAIDS division of labour.
These resources are one part of UNESCO's support to countries so they can reduce people's risk and vulnerability, improve care for the infected and affected, and build individual and institutional capacity for more effective responses to HIV and AIDS. Email aids@unesco.org to request a copy.
Update on EDUCAIDS
SOUTHERN AFRICAA two-year project four countries, the Education Sector plays an with the Virginio Bruni Tedeschi Foundation increasingly key role in the HIV and AIDS has recently come to a close with results response. that far exceeded the targeted impact. In In addition to institutional reforms, a four countriesAngola, number of initiatives were Lesotho, Namibia, and undertaken to support Swazilandcurriculum and teachers in both their learning materials on HIV teaching and their personal and AIDS were improved, health and professional teachers trained in pre and empowerment to better in-service settings were respond to HIV and AIDS. supported with improved For students, activities policy and programme incorporated prevention, guidance, and over 100 advocacy and support. schools in each country Highlights included school mobilised for HIV competitions, young UNESCO awareness and prevention. peoples support groups, Framed around the Nkuebe Peete, 23, of Lesotho awareness-raising activities, discusses his participation in comprehensive education Positive Speaking and PhotoVoice at and Positive Speaking, which sector response outlined by the Paris launch of the exhibition. brings young people living EDUCAIDS, the project was designed to with HIV to the front of the classroom as reinforce the work ongoing in each peer educators and facilitators. countrys Ministry of Education. In Angola, PhotoVoice, an exhibit of photographs and testimonies from people living with HIV for example, the project supported the in the four project countries, was organised creation of a National Strategic Plan on HIV at the country-level and at UNESCO and AIDS featuring sexuality education and Headquarters in Paris, providing a central teacher training to ensure delivery of the avenue for advocacy. [Virtual Exhibit] forthcoming sector policy objectives. In all
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