âAmidst the plethora of books on AIDS, this volume stands out for its concern to locate and properly contextualize the experiences of people with HIV, both socially and geographically. The authors are to be congratulated for synthesising and adding value to scholarship and advocacy internationally.â Peter Aggleton, The University of New South Wales, Australia âDoyal's book shows how social science can help understand and address the challenges facing people living with HIV around the world today. It is a magisterial synthesis presented in a lucid, straightforward and engaging style that illuminates what is at stake in living with HIV today. It is ideally suited to introducing students to this vast and important topic.â Vinh-Kim Nguyen, UniversitĂŠ de MontrĂŠal, Canada âIn this comprehensive book, Doyal starkly traces and connects the gross inequities of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, from infection to death, in relation to political geography, political economy, gender, sexuality, class, and race/ethnicity. Confronting how these inequities harm people with HIV/AIDS and their partners, parents, children, and communities, it offers a galvanizing introduction to the pandemicâs core equity issues.â Nancy Krieger, Harvard School of Public Health, USA âOffering compelling evidence of the inadequacy of biomedical models for the AIDS response, this book provides a clear and lucid look at the inequalities that drive growing rates of HIV infection and the inadequacy of existing systems to address them. Bringing to life the old adage the personal is politicalÂ, it provides valuable evidence of the social and economic realities faced by HIV-infected people everywhere.â Sofia Gruskin, University of Southern California, USA âA powerful combination of qualitative empirical data, sensitive sociological insights into diverse contexts of living and dying with HIV/AIDS, and a clear explication of the relevance of human rights both within nations and globally