Men Make a Difference is the title of the first year 
          of a two-year campaign focusing on the role of men in the AIDS epidemic. 
          The new Campaign aims to involve men more fully in the effort against 
          AIDS and to bring about a much-needed focus on men in national responses 
          to the epidemic.
          
          All over the world, women find themselves at special risk of HIV infection 
          because of their lack of power to determine where, when and how sex 
          takes place. What is less recognized, however, is that the cultural 
          beliefs and expectations that make this the case also heighten men's 
          own vulnerability. HIV infections and AIDS deaths in men outnumber those 
          in women on every continent except sub-Saharan Africa. Young men are 
          more at risk than older ones: about one in four people with HIV is a 
          young man under the age of 25.
          
          Part of the effort to curb the AIDS epidemic must include challenging 
          harmful concepts of masculinity and changing many commonly-held attitudes 
          and behaviours, including the way men view risk and how boys are socialized 
          to become men. Broadly speaking, men are expected to be physically strong, 
          emotionally robust, daring and virile. Some of these expectations translate 
          into ways of thinking and behaving that endanger the health and well-being 
          of men and their sex partners. Other behaviours and attitudes, on the 
          contrary, represent valuable potential that can be tapped by AIDS programmes.
          
          Focusing the Campaign on men also acknowledges the fact that men are often less likely 
          to seek health care than women. Except in a handful of countries, men 
          have a lower life expectancy at birth and higher death rates during 
          adulthood than women. But boys who are brought up to believe that "real 
          men don't get sick" often see themselves as invulnerable to illness 
          or risk. This is reflected in the under-use of health services by men. 
          Greater attention must be given to the health needs of men, including 
          those living with HIV and AIDS.
          
          There are sound reasons why men should become more 
          fully involved in the fight against AIDS. 
          All over the world, men tend to have more sex partners than women, including 
          more extramarital partners, thereby increasing their own and their primary 
          partners' risk of contracting HIV. More men than women inject drugs 
          and are therefore more likely to infect themselves and others through 
          the use of unsterilized equipment. And many men who have sex with other 
          men do not know how to protect themselves or their partners. Secrecy, 
          stigma and shame surrounding HIV compound the effects of all these risk 
          behaviours. The stigma surrounding HIV may prevent many men and women 
          from acknowledging that they have become infected.
          
          A number of 
          special circumstances place men at particularly high 
          risk of contracting HIV. Men, who migrate for work and live away from 
          their families may pay for sex and use substances, including alcohol, 
          as a way to cope with the stress and loneliness of living far from home. 
          Men in all-male environments such as the military may be strongly influenced 
          by a culture that reinforces risk-taking including unsafe sex. And in 
          some all-male institutions such as prisons, men who normally prefer 
          women as sex partners may have unsafe sex with other men.
          
          Male violence further drives the spread of HIV – through 
          wars and the migration they cause, as well as through forced sex. Millions 
          of men a year are sexually violent towards women, girls, and other men 
          sometimes in their own family or household. Worldwide, a recent report 
          states that at least one woman in three has been beaten, coerced into 
          sex or otherwise abused in her lifetime.
          
          At the same time, a balance needs to be struck between recognizing how 
          men's behaviour contributes to the epidemic and recognizing their potential 
          to make a difference. As politicians, as front-line workers, as fathers, 
          as sons, as brothers and friends, men have much to give. Men need to 
          be encouraged to adopt positive behaviours, and to play a much greater 
          part in caring for their partners and families. Studies worldwide show 
          that men generally participate less than women in caring for their children. 
          In terms of the AIDS epidemic, which has left over 13 million children 
          orphaned, there is an urgency for both men and women to provide 
          the love and practical needs such as food, housing, clothing and education 
          for children who have lost their parents.
          
          
          At end 1999, 34.3 million men, women and children were living with HIV 
          or AIDS, and 18.8 million had already died from the disease. In 1999, 
          there were 5.4 million new infections worldwide, of which 4 million 
          were in sub-Saharan Africa, and 800,000 in South and South-East Asia.
          
          In 2000, the Campaign has 
          three broad objectives. The first is to raise awareness of the relationship 
          between men’s behaviour and HIV. The second is to encourage men 
          and adolescent boys to make a strong commitment to preventing the spread 
          of HIV and caring for those affected. And the third objective is to 
          promote programmes that respond to the needs of both men and women.
          
          
          Objective One
          To motivate men and women 
          to talk openly about sex, sexuality, drug use and HIV/aids
          
        
          – 
            motivate men and women to talk openly about sex, sexuality and HIV/aids
            – motivate men and women to talk openly about men who have sex 
            with men and HIV/aids
            – motivate men and women to talk openly about alcohol, drug 
            use and HIV/aids.
            
            
        
        Objective two
          To encourage 
          men to take care of themselves, their partners and families
          
        
          – 
            encourage men to take care of themselves
            – encourage men to take more care of their partners and their 
            families
            – provide good-quality education on sexual health, HIV/aids 
            and life skills for boys – and girls – in and out of schools
            – educate men about their roles as perpetrators and subjects 
            of violence, and their responsibility to stop violence
            – develop HIV/aids programmes for men at particular risk.
            
            
        
        Objective Three
          To promote 
          programmes which respond to the needs of men and women
          
        
          – 
            devise messages, activities and interventions that address the needs 
            of men and women
            – provide support and care for boys and men living with, affected 
            by, or orphaned by, HIV/aids
            – provide employment opportunities and vocational training to 
            reduce the vulnerability of unemployed and disempowered men
            – provide male-friendly health services, including reproductive 
            health and prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV
            – advocate for social, economic and legislative changes to protect 
            the rights of men and women and to challenge the social norms that 
            increase the risk for women of HIV infection through men’s behaviour.