Jean Burke
- Phone: 9385 8482
- Email: j.burke@unsw.edu.au
- Building: Morven Brown
- Room No: G54
Lecturer
BSW (UNSW), Dip Ed (UNE), MSW (CSU), PhD (UNSW)
Research Summary
HIV - women and infant feeding, East Africa
Publications
Burke, J. (2001) Sharing women’s stories: respecting their knowledges. A reflection from Jean Burke. In Working with the stories of women’s lives. Dulwich Centre Publications. Adelaide. 191-193
Burke, J. (Unpublished Thesis). Submitted January 2002 to Charles Sturt University for the degree of Master of Social Work). Factors influencing acceptability of exclusive breastfeeding and other interventions to prevent vertical transmission of HIV
in the Dodoma region of Tanzania.
Burke, J. (2003) Reflections on Being on the Client Side: Mother Work, Client Work, Social Work. Narrative Network News, 25, July 2003, Melbourne: 28-34
Burke, J. and B. Ngonyani (2004). A Social Work Vision for Tanzania. International Social Work Journal. January 2004
Burke, J. (2004). Infant HIV infection: Acceptability of Preventative Strategies in Central Tanzania. AIDS Education and Prevention. Vol. 16 No. 5 October 2004: 415-425
Burke, J., Majule, N., Ikongo, G. and M. Burke (2008) East African mothers with HIV: Testing, talking and transmission to children. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment. Vol. 17 Nos. 3-4 2008: 259-279
Burke, J. (2008) Book Review: Parenting Beliefs, Behaviors, and Parent-Child Relations: A Cross-Cultural Perspective. Australian Social Work Vol 61 No 4: 431-433
Burke, J., Majule, N., Ikongo, G. and M. Burke (2009) “East African mothers with HIV: Testing, talking and transmission to children”. In eds. S.A. MacMaster, B. E. Bride and C. Davis, International Perspectives on Women and HIV. Routledge: London:
26-46
Burke, J. (2009) Ph D Thesis, Jamii, social ties and networks: Managing HIV and infant feeding in Central Tanzania, University of New South Wales






