Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction
- How to have theory at the end of AIDS?
- The Problem of HIV and the Problematization of the End of AIDS
Chapter 2: A Short History towards the End of AIDS
- From Treatment and Prevention to Treatment as Prevention: The Second Wave of Pharamasuticalization and the possibility of an ‘HIV Free Generation’
- Role of Targets and Indicators: The Logic Behind the End of AIDS
- 90-90-90: Three metrics, one goal, many gaps, and issues?
- People and Places: Focusing on the ‘Right Places and the Right People’
- Synchronizing the End of AIDS
- Reviewing the Numbers: What about the 10-10-10?
Chapter 3 – Viral load maps: The entanglements between the individual, the community, and space
- Epidemiological Maps: Spatializing disease and visualizing cases
- Spatializing the End of AIDS: The role of the community viral load
- Spaces of Risk: Viral Load Maps and the Governmentality of the End of AIDS
- Ending (Community) AIDS? Communities at risk, and the governmental logic of surveillance
Chapter 4: Molecular HIV Surveillance: Issues of Consent, Ethics, and Molecular Truth Telling
- Defining Molecular HIV Surveillance: From Clinical Usage to Epidemiological Surveillance
- Molecular Truth-Telling: Uncovering hidden risk groups, networks, and desires
- Inferring the Role of Immigration on ‘HIV Dynamics’: The Figure of the Immigrant
- Uncovering 'Risk Groups': Molecular Truth Telling, Non-Disclosed Men Who Have Sex with
- Men and Heterosexual Men Who Have Sex with Transgender Women
- Molecular Truths, Surveillance, and Subjectivities: Speaking Truthfully About Sex and HIV
- The Ethics of it All: Consequences of Translation
Chapter 5: PrEP: The Public Life of an Intimate Drug
- Introduction
- ‘Truvada Whores and the Truvada Wars’
- Framing the Truvada Whore
- Reclaiming the Inner Whore in the Name of Prevention
- PrEP: Poison, Cure and the Scapegoating of PrEP Users
- Marx on PrEP?
- Austerity, Cost, Access and Responsibility: Whose responsibility and whose risk is it anyway?
- NHS England versus 'The People': PrEP, Policy, and Uncertainty
- Responsibility: Fiscal and Moral?
- Ending AIDS Through PrEP: A public controversy over a reluctant object
Chapter 6 – ‘HIV both Starts and Stops with Me’: Health Promotions, Neoliberalism and Responsibility
- Introduction
- Responsibility both Starts and Stops with Me: Know Your Status and Access Drugs!
- Framing Responsibility through Choice: It Starts with Me
- A Note on Neoliberalism at the End of AIDS
- Sex, Choice, Prevention and the Individual: Playing Sure to End AIDS
- Disciplining for Pleasure: Anticipating, Pre-emption, Planning and Pleasure
Chapter 7: ‘The Category is: Suppress! Disclose! Survive!’, ‘Positive Living’ in Health Promotions for People Living With HIV in the Era of the End of AIDS
- Suppress! Disclose! Survive!
- Heroic Suppression
- The Detectables? What undetectable can tell us about new norms for HIV status, and the notion of viral suppression as success criteria
- Disclosure: Positive Talk as Care of the Self
- The Detectables?
- Concluding Remarks
Chapter 8: Conclusion: A tentative end to AIDS?
- The Post in Post-AIDS and the End in Ending AIDS
- Attending to the Future: Speculation as Method