Kim Blankenship

Kim M. Blankenship is an American sociologist and HIV/AIDS researcher. She is a professor at the American University College of Arts and Sciences and the director of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Core of the District of Columbia Center for AIDS Research.

Education

Blankenship completed a bachelor of arts in sociology at College of William & Mary. She earned a master of arts and Ph.D. in sociology at Duke University.[1]

Career and research

At Yale University, Blankenship was the associate director of the center for interdisciplinary research on AIDS from 1998 to 2008. From 2008 to 2010, she worked at the Duke Global Health Institute and was a member of the sociology faculty at Duke University. She is a professor of sociology at American University College of Arts and Sciences and the director of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Core of the District of Columbia Center for AIDS Research.[1]

Blankenship researches structural interventions and social determinants of health. She explores the implementation and impact of community mobilization in HIV prevention.[1]

gollark: That's a terrible view and probably not even a very consistent one.
gollark: That sentence does NOT parse properly.
gollark: The government doesn't exist in a vacuum. They're influenced by people too. I think whatever stuff is broken in America is broken for complex reasons you can't just blame on "not enough government" or "too much government".
gollark: As any political physicist knows, if an ancap and komrad kit, an authleft, meet, they will mutually annihilate and release vast amounts of energy.
gollark: oh no. this cannot end well.

References

  1. "Faculty Profile: Kim Blankenship". American University. Retrieved 2019-05-13.
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