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*New geographies of HIV/AIDS in times of PrEP*


*Call for papers/panellists at the Association of American Geographers
Annual Meeting, New Orleans, 10-14 April 2018 *



Convenors: *Gavin Brown* (University of Leicester) & *Cesare Di
Feliciantonio* (Maynooth University)



Following the introduction and the expanding availability of Pre-Exposure
Prophylaxis (PrEP) and improved uses of ‘treatment as prevention’ for those
already infected with HIV, new infections-rates for HIV have started to
decline, especially in those cities and among those populations where
campaigning and public investments have been strongest. As argued by
Auerbach and Hoppe (2015: 1), “getting PrEP to ‘work’ is more complicated
than simply ‘getting drugs into bodies’”. Rather, PrEP embodies a range of
interacting physiological, psychological and social realities that together
affect (...) relationship dynamics, sexual cultures and social arrangements
that have influence beyond HIV”.  In fact the use of PrEP (as well as the
adherence to antiretroviral therapies, ARTs, for HIV-positive people)
reshapes the meanings associated with categories such as ‘safe’, ‘bareback’
and ‘raw’ sex, offering new possibilities for empowerment as well as new
forms of biopower (Dean, 2015; Preciado, 2015).  Given the persistent
inequalities in the access and availability of PrEP, we think there is the
need for a serious engagement by geographers and social scientists in
producing knowledge about the emerging social and spatial dimensions of HIV
prevention and treatment, including the ways in which new socio-technical
assemblages of treatment and prevent have reconfigured the social,
cultural, and sexual lives of people with (and at risk of infection from)
HIV.

We invite contributions around (but not limited to) the following
topics/questions:

·      the uneven geographies of PrEP accessibility and availability;

·      the political economy of PrEP;

·      the socio-technical materialities of PrEP;

·      PrEP, race, gender and class;

·      how PrEP impacts upon HIV-related acceptance and stigma;

·      the (uneven) social and spatial dimensions of the persistence of
“Truvada whores” stigma (Calabrese and Underhill, 2015);

·      the sexual citizenship of undetectability;

·      PrEP as community-based activism;

·      PrEP as the expression of biopower;

·      comparative perspectives on campaigns, policies and strategies to
implement PrEP access;

·      intersections between PrEP-related activism and HIV+-related activism

·      the geographical implications of ‘undetectability’;



Expressions of interest

We intend to organize a paper or panel session depending on the preferences
of the participants. If interested, please contact Gavin Brown
(*[log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>*) and Cesare Di Feliciantonio
(*[log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>*) by *October 6th*; in the email please
include a 250-words abstract if you prefer a paper session or a short
outline (up to 7 lines) if you prefer a panel session. We will try to
arrange the best format solution accordingly.



References

Auerbach, J. D. and Hoppe, T. A. 2015. Beyond “getting drugs into bodies”:
social science perspectives on pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV. *Journal
of the International AIDS Society* 18(suppl. 3),
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.18.4.19983 [last visit: August 24th 2017]

Calabrese, S. K. and  Underhill, K. 2015. How Stigma Surrounding the Use of
HIV Preexposure Prophylaxis Undermines Prevention and Pleasure: A Call to
Destigmatize “Truvada Whores”. *American Journal of Public Health* 105(10):
1960-4.

Dean, T. 2015. Mediated intimacies: raw sex, Truvada, and the biopolitics
of chemoprophylaxis. *Sexualities* 18(1/2): 224-46.

Preciado, P. 2015. Condoms chimiques. *Libération* 11/06,
http://www.liberation.fr/chroniques/2015/06/11/condoms-chimiques_1327747
[last visit: August 24th 2017]

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