Bruno Meini is a member of the Observatory and Methods for Health, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy. He holds a Ph.D. in Criminology from the University of Bologna, an MA in Criminal Justice from the School of Criminal Justice at Rutgers University as well as two master's degrees, one in Research Methods in the Social Sciences from the University of Florence, and the second in Development, Innovation and Change from the School of Development, Innovation and Change at University of Bologna. Meini's current research interests lie in the areas of criminological theory, policing, crime prevention, victimology, and sociology of HIV and AIDS.
There are many academic articles that deal with HIV and AIDS, but this is the first scholarly book that deals with these subjects in detail from a sociological perspective. The views of every important sociologist since Durkheim with relevance to Dr Meini's focus on HIV/AIDS are explained with admirable clarity. The book's interest will not be limited to sociologists, but it will interest many other scholars, including epidemiologists, political scientists, social workers, and criminologists and victimologists. Those dealing with public policy, global affairs and international child welfare will also find the book of value. In short the book promises to have wide impact in academia. The book is highly original and is ambitious in the scope and the depth of its scholarship. Even so, it is written in an open and accessible style. It would be appropriately assigned in both graduate and upper-level undergraduate classes. Somewhat unusually for an academic book, it will also be interest to the general reader who will be amazed at the number of themes and contemporary debates that Dr Meini ties into the volume. Prof. Ronald V. Clarke School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey In this timely and original book, Dr Meini reflects upon the phenomenon of HIV/AIDS, describing how the Human Immunodeficiency Virus has enveloped and encircled the globe since the early 1980s. While the world's attention has been largely redirected to the unfolding crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, one cannot forget that as many as 40 million citizens of the world are currently infected with HIV. Indeed, as Dr Meini points out, the Sub-Saharan African region remains the most severely affected, where nearly 1 in every 25 adults live with HIV, which accounts for almost two-thirds of the people living with the virus worldwide today. HIV/AIDS is a topic that intersects with public policy issues across many disciples, including sociology, criminology, law, medicine, victimology, epidemiology, and risk management. Dr Meini interweaves the many allied themes associated with HIV into his wide-ranging treatment of the subject, including human rights, law enforcement, injecting drug use, medical confidentiality, sexuality and stigma, health and safety, sexual violence, discrimination, and the media treatment of the phenomenon that has the duty to inform but all too often falls victim to the irresponsibility of misinformation-spreading and fear-mongering. The HIV pandemic shows no signs of abating, so there remains an urgent requirement for the pursuit of policy choices to tackle it. Dr Meini recites these in a scholarly and forthright manner. The book should thus appeal to a wide range of readers. I endorse it without reservation. Prof Rick Sarre Professor of Law and Criminal Justice, University of South Australia