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The HIV/AIDS epidemic continues to ravage much of Africa and threatens to do the same elsewhere. Last year, President George W. Bush pledged $15 billion in aid to combat HIV/AIDS, tripling the U.S. commitment to fighting the epidemic. One year later, what is the status of the U.S. commitment?...
One fifth of the world's population today is Muslim, and this vast expanse of humanity may represent the next major "risk region" for contagion of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Indeed, in the years immediately ahead, the AIDS pandemic is all but sure to exact a grim toll in a number of...
A look at China's economy suggests that the country is particularly vulnerable to HIVAIDS and other epidemic illnesses.
Adoption of a stakeholder approach is likely to undermine essentialresearch and developmentwhile doing little to curtail the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
It may well be time to allocate some of the ballooning AIDS budget to measuring what is actually causing problems in Africa.
AEI's Nicholas Eberstadt and Laura M. Kelley released a study on HIV/AIDS in the Muslim world detailing the scope of the epidemic and efforts to fight its spread.
The Bush administration would be well advised to devote more of its anti-AIDS energies into rousing these three governments to embrace HIV strategies of their own.
It is common knowledge that the AIDS virus is devastating Africa, but China, the most populous county in the world, might also have a significant problem.



