Livelihood Trajectories and HIV and AIDS in South West Uganda -- follow-on funding
Lead Research Organisation:
University of East Anglia
Department Name: International Development
Abstract
Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
Organisations
Publications
Agol D
(2017)
Complex agricultural livelihoods and aflatoxin exposure in rural Uganda
in AFRICAN JOURNAL OF FOOD, AGRICULTURE, NUTRITION AND DEVELOPMENT
Amurwon J
(2015)
The relevance of timing of illness and death events in the household life cycle for coping outcomes in rural Uganda in the era of HIV.
in International journal for equity in health
Amurwon J
(2017)
"Helping my neighbour is like giving a loan" -the role of social relations in chronic illness in rural Uganda.
in BMC health services research
Barnett T
(2010)
Response by the authors Letter to the Editors
in Tropical Medicine & International Health
Dominic Bukenya Yiga (author)
(2014)
The longitudinal impact of HIV and AIDS on households in rural south western Uganda : fiction or reality?
Janet Seeley
(2009)
The intergenerational transmission of poverty during the AIDS epidemic in Uganda
Janet Seeley (Editor)
(2011)
A workshop on `the longitudinal impact of HIV/AIDS on agriculture and rural livelihoods in Uganda' : proceedings
Rugalema, Gabriel; Niehof, Anke; Gillespie, Stuart
(2010)
AIDS and Rural Livelihoods: Dynamics and Diversity in Sub-Saharan Africa
Seeley J
(2015)
Mitigating the impact of the epidemic on the households and families of older people in rural Uganda: lessons for social protection
in African Population Studies
Seeley J
(2010)
The effects of HIV/AIDS on rural communities in East Africa: a 20-year perspective.
in Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH
Seeley Janet
(2013)
HIV and East Africa: Thirty Years in the Shadow of an Epidemic
Taylor B
(2011)
The impact of HIV on agricultural livelihoods in southern Uganda and the challenges of attribution.
in Tropical medicine & international health : TM & IH
Description | This grant was very useful in supporting the collection of information on how the HIV epidemic has affected the families and communities in Uganda |
Exploitation Route | The findings have fed into further research as well as formed the basis for a book (published in September 2013. |
Sectors | Healthcare,Other |
Description | Yes. This was described in the final report for the grant and the impact summary I submitted. |
Sector | Healthcare,Other |
Impact Types | Societal |