Denis, SekiwuOlivia Nina, Rugambwa2021-06-042021-06-042021http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12493/489Often times, contemporary health and epidemiological practices ignore indigenous information on HIV prevention. Colonial hegemony tends to replicate indigenous knowledge bases as primordial, superstitious, and lacking vivid scientific explanation to qualify the test for medical diagnostic study. Using an information science viewpoint and an anti-colonial discursive theory, this paper challenges the skewed discernment that it is only Western knowledge production that is considered legitimate knowledge. The authors argue that indigenous HIV/AIDS information exists and can be integrated into the curriculum to complement Western knowledge paradigms on adolescent HIV prevention.Adolescents, Anti-Colonialism, Health Curriculum, HIV Prevention, HIV/AIDS, Indigenous Knowledge, Information Systems, SchoolingDocumenting Student Representation of Indigenous HIV/AIDS Information and Integration Into the School CurriculumArticle