Abstract

ABSTRACT This article explores the handling of HIV/AIDS in the student community of Warwick University between 1987–1994. It investigates the perception, management, and navigation of the crisis within the context of student sexual health. The article draws on an extensive body of high-quality original research, particularly archived student newspapers, supplemented with further student union and university records deposited in the Modern Records Centre at the University of Warwick. In the absence of substantial scholarship on the interaction between HIV/AIDS and university students, this original research is essential in reconstructing a picture of how students, presumed to be sexually liberated, responded to HIV/AIDS.

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