
AIDS in the UK
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Content
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables, and Appendices
- Figures
- Tables
- Appendices
- List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Introduction: The 'History of the Present'
- The History of AIDS
- Frameworks of Interpretation
- Part 1: 1981-1985: Policy from Below
- 1. 'AIDS Missionaries': Self-Help and the Initial Response to AIDS
- Voluntarism and AIDS: The Initial Gay Response
- The Construction of a Policy Community: Gays
- The Construction of a Policy Community: Clinicians and Scientists
- Scientific Constructions
- British Science and AIDS: Early Research Funding and the Role of Medical Research Council
- AIDS 'Missionaries'
- 2. 1983-1984: The 'Gift Relationship': AIDS and the Blood
- Initial Anxieties
- Blood and Self-Sufficiency
- Problems for Blood Donation
- Testing the Blood
- Science Solidifies: The Discovery of the Virus
- 3. 1985: The Liberal Response Defined
- Pressure for a Punitive Response
- Pressure for a Punitive Response: Health Professionals Panic
- Public Panic, 'Moral Panic' and the Role of the Media
- Politicians Press for Notification
- The Establishment of a Liberal Departmental Response
- The Role of the Expert Advisory Group on AIDS
- The Health-Education Issue
- Part 2: 1986-1987: The Wartime Response
- 4. 1986: The Drugs Issue. AIDS Rises up the Policy Agenda
- War and Social Change
- Local Policy Development
- The First Health-Education Campaign
- Heterosexual Spread Becomes a Reality: AIDS and Drug Use
- Women and Children: The Future of the Race?
- Numbers and Costs
- 5. 'National Risk': The Work of the Cabinet Committee
- Summer/Autumn 1986 The Power of the Bureaucracy: AIDS and the Civil Servants
- Autumn and Winter 1986: The Mood of War and the Commons Emergency Debate
- November 1986-February 1987. Whitelaw and the Cabinet Committee
- Public Education
- Testing and Screening
- Funding Issues: The Funding of Medical Research
- Science and Policy: The Evaluation of Needle Exchange
- The Limits of Liberalism: Condoms
- The Political Consensus: The AIDS Control Act 1987
- 6. 1986-1987: 'National Community' and the 'Respectable Out' for Politicians
- 1986: The UK AIDS Foundation
- AIDS Education Council to Health Education Authority
- Controlling the Voluntary Sector: The National AIDS Trust
- Mainstreaming the Helpline
- 'National Interest' Versus 'Public Interest'
- Opposition Defused
- The Social Services Committee Sets the Seal on Consensus
- The Committee's Report
- Ethics Defeats Epidemiology? The Issue of Anonymous Screening.
- Part 3: 1987-1989: Normalization and Chronic Disease: The Power of Epidemiology
- 7. Internationalism and Bureaucratization
- Declining Political Interest?
- AIDS and the International Ethic
- Normalization and Bureaucratization
- The Function of AIDS: Services and Specialisms
- 'Professional Voluntarism'
- Research Normalization
- 8. The Chronic Disease?
- The Rise of AZT
- 'Mainstreaming' AIDS: The Early National AIDS Trust
- Troubles at the Health Education Authority
- Troubles in the AIDS Voluntary Sector
- Cultural Mainstreaming: AIDS becomes 'Smart'
- 9. Changing the Consensus: Screening and Testing
- Anonymous Screening
- The Health-Care Worker Issue
- Extending the Consensus?
- Part 4: 1990-1994: The Repoliticization of AIDS
- 10. Orthodoxy and 'Fringe': The Anti-AIDS Alliance
- Downgrading Continues
- Compensation for Haemophiliacs and Transfusion AIDS
- The Anti-AIDS Alliance
- External Opposition Wins Internal Support
- The 'Other' Reappears: Africans and AIDS
- Science Changes and the Consensus Alters
- 11. The Repoliticization of AIDS
- Whither the 'AIDS Policy Community'?
- Gay Fragmentation: Legitimation and Regaying
- Science and Policy: The End of War?
- 12. CONCLUSION
- Notes
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Index
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