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UNU-WIDER Livelihood Risk from HIV in Semi-Arid Tropics of Rural Andhra Pradesh

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Livelihood Risk from HIV in Semi-Arid Tropics of Rural Andhra Pradesh

This paper discusses the livelihood dynamics in the fragile landscape of the semi arid tropics (SAT) of Andhra Pradesh. SAT is home to the poorest of the poor who live in conditions of persistent drought, subsistence agriculture and poor access to markets. This paper is a case study focusing particularly on labour migration, its role in influencing the health risk behaviour of migrants and in the spread of the HIV epidemic among SAT rural households. The most vulnerable population in these drought prone regions are the migrant labourers, and their vulnerability is influenced by three major factors—the vulnerability and unstable productivity in the degraded and marginal landscape, the caste system that has traditionally kept them backward and vulnerable, and experiences in the external environment to which they migrate. This study—based on a theoretical framework, whereby livelihood risks lead to health risks, particularly HIV infection—outlines the process that causes a further deterioration of the household and the occurrence of cyclical health risk. The paper calls for a multisectoral approach to tackle the issue of migrant vulnerability, and for interventions with a more migrant-need sensitive approach.
Publisher:
UNU-WIDER
Series:
WIDER Research Paper
Volume:
2008/49
Title:
Livelihood Risk from HIV in Semi-Arid Tropics of Rural Andhra Pradesh
Authors:
B. Valentine Joseph Gandhi, M. Cynthia Serquiña Bantilan, and Devanathan Parthasarathy
Publication date:
April 2008
ISSN Web:
1810-2611
ISBN 13 Web:
9789292300975
Copyright holder:
© UNU-WIDER
Copyright year:
2008
Keywords:
labour migration, HIV risk behaviour, agriculture, health, semi-arid tropics
JEL:
I19, O5, Q19
Project:
Fragility and Development
Sponsor:
UNU-WIDER gratefully acknowledges the financial contributions to the project by The Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), the Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs, and the UK Department for International Development—DFID.
Format:
online

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