Resource Library

The Clearinghouse’s Resource Library contains hundreds of resources on voluntary medical male circumcision for HIV prevention. You may search the entire site, including these resources, by adding key words in the Search box located in the upper right corner of the website. The Resource Library enables you to browse resources by topic and filter them by different categories. Choose a topic from the menu on the right side of the page to generate a list of resources by topic, then use the filters to narrow the results. (Click on the “+” icon next to the topic name to expand the nested topics.) You may also filter the entire list of resources in the library by document type, country, language, and year of publication.

 

Resources

Displaying 1171 - 1185 of 1247
Part 3 of the annual AVAC report includes the following topics: Going site by site to learn from STEP; How AIDS vaccine research must help address the African-American epidemic... read more
This report by the Global HIV Prevention Working Group offers a new analysis that examines the future course of the epidemic with and without a greatly scaled-up prevention... read more
This report from the Global HIV Prevention Working Group (PWG) focuses specifically on behavioral HIV prevention. The report surveys what we know about the effectiveness of... read more
Part 1 of the annual AVAC Report takes on a different facet of the question that the AIDS vaccine field has faced since September 2007, when the STEP study halted immunizations: ... read more
The Women Won't Wait Campaign designed this fact sheet to educate others on their campaign and mission to end HIV and violence against women.
This self-assessment tool provides practical guidance on legal, regulatory, and policy considerations associated with implementation and scale-up of male circumcision services for... read more
Developed for qualified trainers, this document provides a detailed course outline with objectives for each training activity, a suggested course schedule, visual aids,... read more