Register now for our "HIV Criminalization and Women: A Roundtable Conversation with Survivors" webinar on Tuesday, October 30th, 2018 froom 12:00 pm-1:30 pm EST.
This important webinar will open with a presentation on what you need to know about HIV criminalization by Carrie Foote, PhD, with the HIV Modernization Movement–Indiana. It will also include a roundtable discussion with...
Register today and join the Sero Project for a webinar for Multi-Level Support to PLHIV Facing Criminal Charges, Wednesday, December 19, 2018 at 2pm EST.
Defendants charged with HIV exposure crimes need different types of support to successfully challenge and navigate their prosecutions. This includes legal, financial, emotional, and family and community support,...
Join the Sero Project on Thursday, November 29th, 2018 at 2pm ET / 1pm CT / 12pm PT for a webinar with South Carolina HIV Criminalization Ambassadors of PLHIV.
This session will include an overview of the train the trainers (TOT) and campaign planning training that was given in January 2018 to the South Carolina HIV Criminalization Ambassadors, a coalition of PLHIV working...
It’s a fact: people living with HIV who are on effective treatment and have an undetectable viral load cannot transmit HIV to sexual partners. U=U is a gamechanger, but not everyone knows it. U=U is a rapidly growing international movement to ensure the groundbreaking U=U science reaches the people it was intended to benefit.
June 3-6, 2018 Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis via PWN-USA
SERO Project and Positive Women’s Network – USA are excited to announce that registrationis now open for the 2018 HIV is Not a Crime III National Training Academy! Planning to participate? Register now! Get...
Register nowfor the first WATCH! advocacy webinar of 2018! In honor of National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day (NWGHAAD), we are pleased to present "The Well Project: Building Hope and Leadership...
We envision a world in which all Black women – cisgender, transgender and gender nonconforming Black women – are heard, trusted and respected. We are working to ensure our wants and needs are met in order to create and live within circumstances that allows us to thrive!
This episode features a conversation with diverse community leaders, vocalizing expectations for racial-justice, HIV-equity, and the centering of human rights in the incoming Biden-Harris administration's policy priorities.
Join our panel of women living with HIV to talk mental health: how we can take care of our mental health while supporting others, and why it's more important than ever right now.
On November 18th at 12-1pm ET, Merck and Prevention Access Campaign are hosting Owning HIV Presents: HIV in Young, Black America, a free LIVE and on-demand webinar and Q&A to discuss HIV among young adults in the U.S., with particular focus on the Black and African American community, which is disproportionately impacted by HIV.
CHLP's Amir Sadeghi joins this ACT UP NY webinar on Thursday, October 29th at 6pm ET to unpack the criminalization of people living with HIV, and provide a national-legal overview of reforms to disease-specific criminal law. With that background, you will also hear from state-level advocates on reform campaigns in Nevada and Virginia, giving additional perspective on lessons you can incorporate into your own HIV decriminalization advocacy.
The 11th Annual International Conference on Stigma will be held from Monday November 16 to Friday November 20, 2020 as a Virtual Howard University Event.
What will it take to end white supremacist structures and systems in our work?
The conference is Thursday October 29 and Friday October 30 and features four AMAZING speakers - Dr. Camara Phyllis Jones, Dr. Russell Brewer, Dr. Sheldon Fields, and Dr. Tonia Poteat.
In this webinar hosted by the Positive Justice Project Advisory Group, panelists will dig deep into the mix of perspectives on how best to use the remarkable advances in HIV treatment and preventative tools in their advocacy to reform HIV criminal laws. Panelists will share their intimate levels of expertise on changing the narrative about people living with HIV, “treatment as prevention” (TasP), and incorporating principles of racial and gender justice into HIV criminal-legal reforms.