
Ainsworth, M. 1993. AIDS and African development. Washington: World Bank.
Ballard and King. 2000. HIV/AIDS impact on South Africa business rises. Johannesburg: Ballard and King Communications.
Berer, M., and S. Ray. 1993. Women and HIV/AIDS: Information, action and resources on women and HIV/AIDS, reproductive health and sexual relationships. London: Harper Collins Publishers.
Chingambo, L. J. 1999. Study on the effects of HIV/AIDS in small businesses in Zambia. Study commissioned by the International Labour Organization, Lusaka.
Cuddington, J. T. 1993. Modelling the macroeconomic effects of AIDS, with an application to Tanzania. The World Bank Economic Review 7, no. 2: 173-189.
Cuddington, J. T., and D. Hancock. 1995. The macroeconomic impact of AIDS in Malawi: A dualistic labour surplus economy. Journal of African Economies 4, no. 1: 1-23.
Department for International Development. 2002. The Malawi National Gemini MSE Baseline Survey. Final report, Lilongwe.
Donahue, J. 1995. Training module: Small business and economic development. Washington: United States Peace Corps Business Development Sector.
Government of Zimbabwe. 1999. National HIV/AIDS policy. Harare: Government of Zimbabwe.
International Labour Organization (ILO). 2000. Overview of agency approaches, mandate, and future services for small enterprise development. Geneva: International Labour Organization.
______. 2001. The labour market and employment implications of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Geneva: Governing Body Committee on Employment and Social Policy.
______. 2002. Decent Work Agenda. Geneva: International Labour Organization.
International Labour Organization Eastern Africa Multidisciplinary Advisory Team. 1995 The impact of HIV/AIDS on the productive labour force in Africa. EAMAT Working Paper, no. 1. Addis Ababa: International Labour Organization.
Hopolang, P. 2001. HIV/AIDS: Its ramifications on the economy. Strides 8, no. 1: 4-6.
Jackson, H. 1992. AIDS: Action now: Information, prevention and support in Zimbabwe. Harare: Jongwe Printing and Publishing Co.
Kambou, G., S. Devarajan, and M. Over. 1992. The economic impact of AIDS in an African country: Simulations with a computable general equilibrium model of Cameroon. Journal of African Economies 1, no. 1:109-129.
Loewenson, R. 1998. Managing human resource and industrial relations issues in HIV/AIDS. Training and Research Support Centre. ZNCC Workshop, Harare.
Monitoring the AIDS Pandemic (MAP). 2002. The Status and Trends of the HIV/AIDS Epidemics in the World. Provisional Report, Durban.
Mbizvo, M. T., et al. 1997. Zimbabwe further analysis: Knowledge of STIs and AIDS risk awareness and condom use. Maryland: Macro International Inc.
Msiska, R. 1990. An intervention study to develop and test the additional benefit of an enabling approach in reducing HIV/STD transmission in a fish trading community in Zambia. Research proposal for the National AIDS Control Programme, Lusaka.
National AIDS Council. 2002. AIDS and the workplace. Harare: National AIDS Council.
Ray, S., and G. Williams. 1993. Work against AIDS: Workplace based AIDS initiative in Zimbabwe. London: Hamlyn House.
Robert, P. 1999. The informal sector, small business enterprise and the HIV epidemic. Dakar: United Nations Development Programme Regional Project on HIV and Development for sub-Saharan Africa.
SAFAIDS. 1993. HIV/AIDS concerns of women in the workplace. SAFAIDS.
The Southern Africa Tourism Services Association. 2002. Far-reaching Study on HIV/Aids in the hospitality sector. Johannesburg: The Southern Africa Tourism Services Association
UNAIDS. 1999. The UNAIDS report. Geneva: UNAIDS.
______. 2000. Report on the global HIV/AIDS epidemic. Geneva: UNAIDS.
UNIFEM-SARO. 2001. The UNIFEM-SARO report.
USAID. 1992. Confronting AIDS in the developing world. A report to Congress on the USAID Program for Prevention and Control of HIV Infection, Washington, D. C.
______. 1998. Zimbabwe: A third nationwide survey of micro and small enterprise. Final report, Harare.
Young, S. A. 2000. Perceptions of employers about HIV/AIDS in the world of work. A brief note on the results of a pilot study of some enterprises in South Africa. Geneva: International Labour Organization Bureau of Statistics.
