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Men's Migration and Women's HIV/AIDS Risks in Mozambique (2006-8)
 
Although migration is often said to be a key factor in the spread of HIV/AIDS, evidence to support the claims that migration increases exposure to HIV risks remains inconclusive. Moreover, most attention has been focused on HIV/AIDS risks of migrants, primarily men, in cities and other destination areas. Relatively little systematic information exists about migrants’ wives remaining in rural areas and their exposure to infection risks and access to prevention. In addition to possible direct effects of migration, i.e., the effects that stem from women’s sexual relationships with their migrant husbands, husbands’ migration may affect women’s HIV/AIDS knowledge and risk exposure indirectly. Migration transforms women’s marital unions, alters their social and economic constraints and opportunities, and reconfigures their social and sexual networks. These changes may encourage and/or facilitate women’s extramarital partnerships, but at the same time, may give them greater ability to avoid risky sex with both their marital and extramarital partners.

 

To examine this complex combination of direct and indirect effects the project collected a complementary mix of quantitative and qualitative data in 2006: a representative survey of 1680 married women in 56 villages of four rural districts of southern Mozambique and a series of in-depth interviews with a subsample of survey respondents. The survey sample included women married to migrants and those married to non-migrants thus allowing for a comparison of the two groups of women with respect to HIV/AIDS awareness and risk perceptions and exposure to HIV infection risks and practice of prevention. In-depth interviews, conducted with women married to migrants, were design to corroborate and complement the survey data, especially in such sensitive areas as sexual networking and practice of prevention. In addition to HIV/AIDS awareness and risks, the analyses of the collected data have focused on fertility, childhood mortality, and women's status, among other topics.

 

The project was funded by a grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (grant #R21HD050175) and conducted in collaboration with the Centre for African Studies of Eduardo Mondlane University (Mozambique). Additional NICHD support (grant #R01HD058365) funds two additional waves of data collection - in 2009 (completed) and 2011.

 

If you interested in more information about this project or would like to gain access to the data, please contact the project PI, Dr. Victor Agadjanian.

 

Publications:

Victor Agadjanian, Carlos Arnaldo, and Boaventura Cau. "Economic Gains vs. Health Risks: Men’s Migration and Women’s HIV/AIDS Views in Mozambique." CePoD WP #09-116

 

Agadjanian, Victor, Scott T. Yabiku, and Boaventura Cau. “Men’s migration and women’s fertility in rural Mozambique Demography (forthcoming)