Based on original research in Northern Thailand and drawing on the breadth of indigenous Thai language materials, this study offers a sustained and powerful criticism of the normative modeling of the Thai AIDS epidemic in order to elicit new and more effective points of intervention.
For eighteen years, Thailand's HIV/AIDS was routinely depicted as the world's fastest moving AIDS epidemic. This work takes a look at the development of AIDS and at the analyses. It concludes that the "problem" of Thai AIDS has been constructed in order to legitimate specific forms of gender and class-based interventions.