Religious Responses to HIV/AIDS in Brazil (ICPSR 35915)

Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s)
Richard G. Parker, Columbia University. Mailman School of Public Health

This is an external resource to which ICPSR links as a courtesy. These data are not available from ICPSR. Users should consult the data owners (via Religious Responses to HIV/AIDS in Brazil) directly for details on obtaining these resources.

Slide tabs to view more

This project conducts archival research, surveys, participant observation, oral histories, in-depth interviews, life history interviews, and case studies at five study sites in Brazil. Data are collected on the relationship between Catholic, Evangelical Protestant, and Afro-Brazilian religions and HIV/AIDS in Brazil. Topics include how these religions have responded to HIV at the policy, institutional, and population levels; the importance each of these religions places on HIV; and interactions between each religion and local societies, civil society, and the nation-state.

United States Department of Health and Human Services. National Institutes of Health. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (5R01HD050118)
Hide

  1. NICHD funded the PRIMARY DATA COLLECTION of this project.

  2. DSDR has tried to identify a link which points directly to where the study data reside. In cases where this was not possible a link pointing to the PI's Web site is provided, so users may contact the PI directly regarding access to the data.

Hide