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    Global Justice and Human Rights: Health and Human Rights in Practice.Daniel Tarantola - 2014 - Global Justice : Theory Practice Rhetoric 1.
    The origin and justification of human rights, whether anchored in biological theory, natural law theory, or interests theory, as well as their cultural specificity and actual value as international legal instruments are subject to ongoing lively debates. As theoretical and rhetorical discourses challenge and enrich current understanding of the value of human rights and their relevance to democratic governance, they have found their way into public health in recent decades and play today an increasing role in the shaping of health (...)
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    Toward a New Health Strategy to Control the HIV/AIDS Pandemic.Jonathan Mann, Daniel Tarantola & Jeff O’Malley - 1994 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 22 (1):41-52.
    Since its recognition in the early 1980s, the global HIV/AIDS pandemic has continued to grow relentlessly. Early efforts in HIV prevention sought to influence behavior by providing information about the dangers of AIDS along with recommendations for safe behavior. This approach helped to alert people about AIDS, but was insufficient to promote or sustain behavioral change.The second approach attempted to promote individual behavioral change by designing AIDS programs that would deliver a mix of information, materials, and services. This program-based approach (...)
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    Toward a New Health Strategy to Control the HIV/AIDS Pandemic.Jonathan Mann, Daniel Tarantola & Jeff O’Malley - 1994 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 22 (1):41-52.
    Since its recognition in the early 1980s, the global HIV/AIDS pandemic has continued to grow relentlessly. Early efforts in HIV prevention sought to influence behavior by providing information about the dangers of AIDS along with recommendations for safe behavior. This approach helped to alert people about AIDS, but was insufficient to promote or sustain behavioral change.The second approach attempted to promote individual behavioral change by designing AIDS programs that would deliver a mix of information, materials, and services. This program-based approach (...)
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