Siddharth Dube

   
Sex, Lies and AIDS

Sex, Lies and AIDS A nationwide bestseller since its release in 2000 by HarperCollins India, Sex, Lies and AIDS demolishes the stock stereotype that Indians are asexual as well as government claims that the HIV epidemic is being controlled.

Simply written and with cartoons by the irrepressible Mario Miranda, Sex, Lies and AIDS can be read by anyone, whether college student, parent or politician.

Now available in a second paperback edition and in translation in several Indian languages, it is essential reading to understand the truths about Indian society, sexuality, government, and a disease that has affected millions.




HarperCollins

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Related articles by Siddharth Dube:


An inappropriate tool: criminal law and HIV in Asia
Asian countries have applied criminal sanctions widely in areas directly relevant to national HIV programmes and policies, including criminalization of HIV transmission, sex work, homosexuality and drug injection.
AIDS (Official journal of the International AIDS Society)

AIDS Sutra - Sutras on AIDS in India
In this anthology, 16 noted Indian writers turn their skills to shedding light on India’s AIDS epidemic.
The Lancet

A chance to fix the fight against Aids
To improve prevention, HIV/Aids organisations must roll back George Bush's demonising of sex workers and drug users.
Guardian Unlimited

Bringing UNAids to book
All in all, a UN programme - whose raison d'etre should have been to be a watchdog holding all actors to the highest standards of what works against Aids - has failed to safeguard the interests, or to demonstrably put forward the felt needs and demands of those populations being most severely devastated by this pandemic.
Guardian Unlimited

Sex work is no crime
At a conceptual level, the issue is this: why should any consensual sexual activity between adults — heterosexual, same sex, in exchange for money, within marriage or outside of it — be viewed within a criminal framework at all? The keywords here are 'consent' and 'adult'.
The Times of India

The Global Challenge of HIV/AIDS
A Critical Analysis of the Emerging Threats from the Spread of HIV/AIDS in China, India and Russia and an Update on the African Pandemic.
Before the US Congressional Human Rights Caucus

Fact and fiction about AIDS
AIDS now kills about three lakh Indian adults each year. This is roughly 15 times the number of people killed in the Gujarat earthquake. And in the past 15 years, since HIV first surfaced in India, some 20 lakh to 25 lakh Indians have died of AIDS, that's a 100 or more Gujarat earthquakes.
The Hindu

A nation in denial
The official view is that we are a uniquely moral society, literally that Indians don't have sex. Virtually every Indian political leader, bureaucrat and opinion-maker whom I have interviewed or talked to about HIV/AIDS has asserted this as an unquestionable truth.
Indian Express

India's AIDS Explosion
Despite a decade of record economic growth in India, poverty and tragedy remain as commonplace as ever. A mounting HIV-AIDS epidemic is increasingly to blame. More than 2 million adults have died of AIDS, overwhelmingly in the country's most dynamic states.
The Washington Post

REVIEWS:


"A lucid, compelling and indefatigably researched attempt to stem the tide of denial, prejudice, ineptitude and bigotry that characterize Indian attitudes and policies on AIDS."
THE TELEGRAPH



"Impassioned and lucid analysis. This slim and clearly written volume should be mandatory reading for government officials, health workers and teachers throughout India."
FAR EASTERN ECONOMIC REVIEW



"The real story of AIDS in India and why you should care. In chillingly simple terms portrays the horrors that will befall us if we don’t act soon."
OUTLOOK



“A deeply disturbing book…(written) with language and passion that leave you wrung out.”
DILIP D'SOUZA in Frontline



"Combines a sense of personal outrage, individual insights, meticulous research and documentation, and case histories of real ordinary citizens. The reports of the sexual biographies of a variety of ordinary citizens…invest this book with greater value than any dozen treatises on AIDS."
ASHOK BANKER in REDIFF.COM


“Riveting.”
SUNEETHA KADIYALA and TONY BARNETT, Economic and Political Weekly


"A must-read for every Indian. Anyone worried about their own health or that of the nation simply cannot afford to give it a miss. It lays to rest too many myths for that."
THE STATESMAN


"Want to know about AIDS but didn't know whom to ask? The answer: Sex, Lies and AIDS."
THE WEEK



"Congratulations for writing this magnificent book. I thank you on behalf of INP+ and all people living with HIV in India for presenting the correct scenario on AIDS in India."
ASHOK PILLAI, Indian Network for People Living with HIV/AIDS (INP+)

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