Deadly Disease vs. Chronic Illness: Competing Understandings of HIV in the HIV Non-Disclosure Debate

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.17.4.02

Keywords:

HIV/AIDS, Non- Disclosure, Criminalization, Constructionism, Definitional Contests

Abstract

Over the past several decades, understandings of what it means to have contracted the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have shifted so that an infection once viewed as deadly and ultimately terminal is now largely regarded as chronic and manageable, at least in the West. Yet, the shift has not been complete. There are arenas of discourse where understandings of what health implications HIV carries with it are contested. One such space is the debate concerning the appropriate response to cases of HIV non-disclosure, that is, situations where individuals who are HIV-positive do not disclose their health status to intimate partners. This paper examines the competing constructions of HIV found within this debate, particularly as it has unfolded in Canada. Those who oppose the criminalization of non-disclosure tend to construct HIV as an infection that is chronic and manageable for those who have contracted it, not unlike diabetes. Those who support criminalization have mobilized a discourse that frames the infection as harmful and deadly. We use the case of the HIV non-disclosure debate to make the argument that representations of health conditions can become mired in larger social problems debates in ways that lead to contests over how to understand the fundamental nature of those conditions.

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Author Biographies

Erica Speakman, McMaster University, Canada

Erica Speakman currently teaches in the Sociology Department and Social Psychology Program at McMaster University. Broadly speaking, her research interests include the study of deviance, crime, and social problems, as well as the sociology of health and illness. Specifically, her research is concerned with how illness, criminal law, and social problems intersect.

 

Dorothy Pawluch, McMaster University, Canada

Dorothy Pawluch recently retired after a career that spanned over 30 years in the Department of Sociology at McMaster University and included the development of the Social Psychology Program at the university. Her interests include social constructionism, social problems, deviance, and medical sociology.

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Published

2021-10-31

How to Cite

Speakman, E., & Pawluch, D. (2021). Deadly Disease vs. Chronic Illness: Competing Understandings of HIV in the HIV Non-Disclosure Debate. Qualitative Sociology Review, 17(4), 24–42. https://doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.17.4.02

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