When Communities Assess their AIDS Epidemics is a detailed ethnographic description of the AIDS epidemic in ten U.S. cities and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Employing a rapid ethnographic assessment methodology, cities from the Atlantic to the Pacific have implemented Project RARE (Rapid Assessment, Response, and Evaluation) efforts. These RARE projects examine the moving edge of the AIDS epidemic through descriptions of high-risk sites and identifications of segments of the populations at greatest risk. Utilizing a series of focus groups and street interviews, local field research teams gain an insider's perspective on HIV risk within social contexts. Dr. Benjamin P. Bowser, Dr. Ernest Quimby, and Dr. Merrill Singer have compiled these critical studies that analyze current conditions, challenges, and recommendations encountered by RARE. When Communities Assess their AIDS Epidemics is a powerful and engaging text that will appeal to those interested in public health and anthropology.
Contributions by: Eric Goosby, Louis Kushnick, Robert T. Trotter II, Ric Curtis, Alix Conde, Maria Irizarry, Christina Wolf, Paul LaKosky, Elijah Ward, Lawrence J. Ouellet, William Eric Perkins, David Metzger, Arvilla Payne-Jackson, Barbara Hill, Karen Dodge, Barbara Feeney, Agatha P. Nelson, Patricia R. Todman, Louis Herns Marcelin, Bryan Page, Julie Eiserman, Halley Eisner-Freitas, Floyd Meeks