Maxim Kan PhD student
Contact
Name and title: Maxim KanPhD student
Workplace: Department of Sociology Länk till annan webbplats.
Visiting address Room B833Universitetsvägen 10 B, plan 9
Postal address Sociologiska institutionen106 91 Stockholm
About me
I defended my dissertation in the Sociological Demography at Stockholm University's Demography Unit in September 2023. Previously, I worked for 7 years at the non-profit organization Population Services International in Central Asia. My focus was on public health initiatives, including HIV/AIDS prevention, harm reduction, and family planning. My dissertation focused on examining the influence of gender equality, ethnic background, and religion on reproductive behaviour, including fertility intentions, parity progressions, and contraceptive use in Kazakhstan.
Kan, M. (2023). Sustained and Universal Fertility Recuperation in Kazakhstan. European Journal of Population, 39(23).
Kan, M. (2023). Are gender attitudes and gender division of housework and childcare related to fertility intentions in Kazakhstan? Genus, 79(21).
Little, K., Kan M., Samoylova O., Rsaldinova A., Saliev D., Iskhokov F., Gray R., Hasen N. (2019). Implementation experiences and insights from the scale‐up of an HIV-assisted partner notification intervention in Central Asia. Journal of the International AIDS Society, 22(S3): e25313, https://doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25313
Kan, M., Garfinkel, D., Samoylova, O., Gray, R., Little, K. (2018). Social network methods for HIV case‐finding among people who inject drugs in Tajikistan. Journal of the International AIDS Society, 21(S5): e25139, https://doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25139
Kan, M., Gall, J., Latypov, A., Gray, R., Alisheva, D., Rakhmatova, K., Sadieva, A. (2014). Effective use of naloxone among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan using pharmacy- and community-based distribution approaches. International Journal of Drug Policy, 25 (6):1221-1226, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2014.01.005
Working papers
SRRD 2023:17 Kan, Maxim. Religion and Contraceptive Use in Kazakhstan: A Study of Mediating Mechanisms