The Community Tool Box is a free, online resource for those working to build healthier communities and bring about social change. It offers thousands of pages of tips and tools for taking action in communities.
Want to learn about community assessment, planning, intervention, evaluation, advocacy, and other aspects of community practice?
This cyber-seminar will highlight three of the R2R Mentorship Program projects that are working with community partners to adapt and implement evidence-based interventions.
Working Together: A Guide to Collaborative Research in HIV Prevention is for service providers, researchers and funders who are interested in working on a collaborative research project. It provides a wealth of information drawn from research and years of experience and is full of hands-on, practical strategies for successful collaboration.
The Mpowerment Project is a community-level HIV prevention intervention designed to reduce the frequency of unprotected anal intercourse among young gay/bisexual men, ages 18-29, by mobilizing young gay men to support each other about safer sex and to build a stronger, healthier young gay men’s community.
Project Accept is an HIV prevention trial in which 34 communities in Africa (in South Africa, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe) and 14 communities in Thailand are being randomized to receive either a community-based HIV voluntary counseling and testing (CBVCT) intervention plus standard clinic-based VCT (SVCT), or SVCT alone.
HIV-related stigma is a significant problem globally. HIV stigma inflicts hardship and suffering on people living with HIV and interferes with research, prevention, treatment, care and support efforts. HIV-related stigma refers to negative beliefs, feelings and attitudes towards people living with HIV, their families and people who work with them. HIV stigma often reinforces existing social inequalities based on gender, race, ethnicity, class, sexuality and culture.
This brochure lists research projects with gay men and helpful resources produced by CAPS/PRC.
You might use it to:
Stay up-to-date on research and learn what we found out from research
Provide materials in trainings/presentations
Advocate for services/funding
Write grants
Develop new or modify existing HIV prevention programs
Evaluate current programs
Connect with CAPS/PRC to develop new projects.
Lead rese
This brochure lists research focusing on HIV testing and helpful resources produced by CAPS/PRC.
You might use it to:
Stay up-to-date on research and learn what we found out from research
Use the materials in trainings/presentations
Advocate for services/funding
Write grants
Develop new or modify existing HIV prevention programs
Evaluate current programs
Connect with CAPS/PRC to develop new projects.
Lead re
The Center for AIDS Prevention Studies (CAPS) at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) is a productive, vibrant, and innovative organization committed to conducting cutting-edge, high-impact HIV prevention research. It is the largest research center in the world devoted to social, behavioral, and policy-based approaches to HIV prevention.
A free, online mechanism for peer-reviewing, publishing and disseminating products of health-related community-engaged scholarship that are in forms other than journal articles.