A one-day dialogue addressing the political context within which our
collective community-based work on HIV & Hep C takes place.
Conversations will focus on:
•The history of AIDS organizing & the development of AIDS Service Organizations
•Funding, service integration & financial austerity
•Increasing Public Health surveillance, monitoring & evaluation
•Impacts on people who use services & the consequences of ‘client-ization’
Keynote speakers:
Gary Kinsman
Co-research on the AIDS Activist History Project
Anne Marie DiCenso
Executive Director of PASANAs we are now more
than 30 years into the HIV epidemic, new questions, consequences and
outcomes have been developing in relation to the changing nature of AIDS
Service Organizations. With the move towards service integration,
streamlined funding, and the so-called ‘end of HIV exceptionalism’ there
is a renewed interest in the HIV social service sector as a whole and
how it is shaped and organized in relation to state priorities and
increased public health surveillance.
With these new
developments, our event proposes to take stock of the role of HIV and
Hep C service organizations and ask a number of questions, including:
•What are the limits of current community-based practice based on engagement with the state?
•Are today’s ASOs adequately resourced and designed to undertake their
intended role? Is this role sufficient to address the ongoing and
emerging HIV issues that marginalized communities face?
•Due
to state constraints, what are the consequences on advocacy
possibilities for ASOs, or ASO involvement in social and policy change?
•What are the consequences of new technologies for monitoring and evaluation methods to understand the limitations and potential of community-based HIV and Hep C work?
Speakers include:
Zoë Dodd, Toronto Harm Reduction Alliance
Laurie Edmiston, Executive Director, CATIE
Martin French, Associate Professor, Sociology & Anthropology, Concordia University
Nicole Greenspan, Doctoral candidate, Health Services Research,
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of
Toronto
John Maxwell, Executive Director, AIDS Committee of Toronto (ACT)
Alex McClelland, Humanities Doctoral student, Centre for
Interdisciplinary Studies in Society & Culture, Concordia University
Marvelous Muchenje, Community Health Coordinator, Women's Health in Women's Hands, Community Health CentreMichael Orsini, Chair,
Institute of Feminist & Gender Studies, Associate Professor, School
of Political Studies, University of Ottawa
Maureen Owino, Director, Committee for Accessible AIDS Treatment (CAAT)
Terra Tynes, Hep C Community Support Worker, Toronto Community Hep C Program
Session rapporteurs:
Nora Butler Burke, Concordia University
Colin Hastings, York University
Liam Michaud, Concordia University
Food is provided for all participants. The event space is accessible via ramp and elevator.
This event is FREE!
Supported by:
The CIHR Social Research Centre
http://www.srchiv.ca/
Concordia University
http://www.concordia.ca/--
Alex McClelland
PhD student, Humanities Doctoral Program
Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society & Culture
Concordia University
Montréal, Québec, Canada
mcclell...@gmail.com+1.514.231.4615Twitter: @alexmcclelland
AIDS ACTION NOW! Steering Committee Member
Prisoners' with HIV/AIDS Support Action Network (PASAN), Board Member