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John Blevins

John Blevins is an Associate Research Professor in the Hubert Department of Global Health at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University. He works in the Interfaith Health Program, a program that endeavors to understand the ways in which religion influences the health and wellness of communities both in the United States and around the world and to encourage efforts to mobilize religion as a positive force for public health. Much of John’s works focuses on religion in relation to sexuality and on religion in relation to HIV, both in the United States and in southern and eastern Africa. Currently, much of his work focuses on HIV prevention efforts in the informal settlements of Nairobi, Kenya. John brings an interdisciplinary perspective to this work, having completed graduate studies in Christian theology and counseling psychology and having coordinated public health initiatives for over fifteen years.

Articles

Religion Dispatches
What is the role of religion in addressing the challenges facing contemporary African cultures? A new model suggests that religious organizations may be uniquely suited to effect change.
Article
Religion Dispatches
For 200 years religion, medical science, and psychology have been involved in an intricate, shifting alliance in response to addiction. With recent studies calling core principles of AA into question—like the admission of powerlessness, for example—is AA still the best we’ve got for addressing addiction, or would a different theological model work better?
Article
Religion Dispatches
The United States has exported its contradictory and confusing HIV prevention strategy to Africa: Abstain, Be Faithful, Condoms (ABC). Herewith a modest proposal to reconcile Christianity, identity, and HIV prevention…
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