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Events

Events

Does your AIDS Service Organization or community-based organization have an event about which you’d like to inform our readers?

If so please feel free to contact us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

Oct15

Celebrating an anniversary with a storytelling community event

Monday, 15 October 2012 Written by // What's Up Categories // Community Events, Events, Living with HIV, Revolving Door, Events

PWA (People with AIDS Foundation) 25th Anniversary Speakers Panel this week

Celebrating an anniversary with a storytelling community event

When: Thursday October 18, 2012, 5:30-8pm. Refreshments provided

Where:  200 Gerrard St. East, 2nd Floor (just east of Gerrard and Sherbourne), Toronto

What: Resiliency & Community Action with the panel of:

Joan Anderson, Douglas Graydon, Bill Handley, Douglas Stewart

Storytelling is an ancient art and powerful tool used in almost every culture as a means of honouring our history, educating our communities and sharing or preserving our culture and values. Speakers will reflect on the impact of HIV on our communities and the role of PWA.

Toronto People With AIDS Foundation (PWA)

Making a positive difference

Oct09

Community Info Session: Supreme Court Ruling on HIV Disclosure

Tuesday, 09 October 2012 Written by // Guest Authors - Revolving Door Categories // Community Events, Events, Legal, Living with HIV, Revolving Door, Events, Guest Authors

Toronto meeting October 10 Legal Review plus the Practical, Emotional & Mental Impact on Individuals and our Community.

Community Info Session: Supreme Court Ruling on HIV Disclosure

When: Wednesday, October 10, 2012, 4:30pm – 6:30pm 

Where: 519 Community Centre Ballroom. Church Street, Toronto 

Hosted by: HALCO, PASAN, PWA and members of the Ontario Working Group on Criminal Law & HIV Exposure (CLHE)

Who: Community members, people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS, health service providers are invited. 

This meeting will provide an early interpretation of Friday’s important Supreme Court ruling on HIV disclosure and to provide a safe, community space for discussion and support. Our understanding of the full impact of this case, its impact on our lives and the required next steps for community and advocates will continue to unfold over the coming weeks.  However, it was felt to be critical that an early opportunity be provided for community to meet and increase our understanding, clarify the confusing and conflicting media reports and begin to create a community understanding

Oct01

New insights in HIV management and strategies for a cure

Monday, 01 October 2012 Written by // Guest Authors - Revolving Door, What's Up Categories // Community Events, Events, Health, Treatment, Living with HIV, Revolving Door, Events, Guest Authors

ACT’s second Community Health Forum in the current series is on new insights in HIV management and strategies for a cure. Attendance is free. The forum will also be available via webcast.

New insights in HIV management and strategies for a cure

The second workshop in the current series of free open discussion forums for people living with HIV hosted by the AIDS Committee of Toronto (ACT) will be held on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 at 7:00pm at the Ramada Plaza Hotel, 300 Jarvis Street in Toronto. 

The topic this month is New insights in HIV Management and Strategies for a Cure. The forum will address questions such as: 

  • What is the current problem with curing HIV infection?
  • Reservoirs and immune containment.
  • What should we do in the future? 

ACT has lined up a distinguished panel of experts to present on this topic, including Dr. Tae-Wook Chun from Johns Hopkins University, who is one of the world’s leading experts in this field. 

The workshop will be webcast live so those who cannot attend in person can participate in the event online. The forum and the webcast will begin promptly at 7:00 pm and last two hours. 

To join the live web cast: login at 7:00 pm EDT (23:00 GMT) on October 10 at www.actoronto.org/forum.    

The forum will also be recorded and should be available for viewing on the day following the event at the same website: www.actoronto.org/forum. 

This forum is free and no registration is required. For those attending in person, a light buffet will be available from 6:00 pm. 

For more information, see the flyer below or contact Robin Rhodes at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 416 340 8484 ext. 219. 

 

RELATED ARTICLES

How to live well with HIV, John McCullagh’s interview with Robin Rhodes about ACT’s community health forums.

Sep13

The Daisy Chain Unconferece

Thursday, 13 September 2012 Written by // Guest Authors - Revolving Door Categories // Community Events, Conferences, Events, Research, Health, Sexual Health, Revolving Door, Events, Guest Authors

Online confere​nce on gay/bi/trans/queer men's sexual health and HIV​​​​​ hosted by UWW (University Without Walls) set for September 20

The Daisy Chain Unconferece

UWW reports the unConference is like speed-dating around one common theme. It is designed to make friends fast, learn what they do and how you can collaborate on HIV research on gay/bi/trans/queer men in Canada. in Canada. It is intended for frontline workers in HIV and health care, under/graduate students in all disciplines, health policy makers, teachers, and academic/community based researchers.

This unConference starts with a “plenary” on Home-based rapid HIV testing, presented by: Alex Carballo-Diéguez, Ph,D.  That is followed by online break-out groups for those who want to discuss different aspects of this theme. For example Risk and HIV testing: A gal's inside perspective working with the boys, facilitated by Sarah Chown, Sexual radicals, barebackers, pigs and home based-testing, facilitated by Mikiki and Home-based testing and government policy in Ontario facilitated by Frank McGee.

Read more about it and learn what you’ll need to get ready for the unConference here.

Sep09

Invitation to HALCO AGM

Sunday, 09 September 2012 Written by // Guest Authors - Revolving Door Categories // Community Events, Events, Revolving Door, Events, Guest Authors

. . and showing of the documentary film “Positive Women Exposing Injustice”.

Invitation to HALCO AGM

Hello HIV and health services colleagues,

We are pleased to invite you to our Annual General Meeting (AGM), which is taking place on Thursday September 27, 2012. 

Everyone is welcome and the invitation includes all the details on our website. 

Our AGM will include the documentary film “Positive Women: Exposing Injustice” and a panel discussion following the film.  Panellists include a woman who appeared in the film and one of the film’s producers.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us. Thank you and we hope to see you at our AGM on September 27! 

HIV & AIDS Legal Clinic Ontario (HALCO) Toronto, Ontario, Canada 

Tel. 416-340-7790 / 1-888-705-8889

www.halco.org

Sep02

Stick it - interactively.

Sunday, 02 September 2012 Written by // Guest Authors - Revolving Door Categories // Community Events, Activism, Events, Upcoming Events, Revolving Door, Events, Guest Authors

Pin Buttons Bring Community Together Over Live Stream Exhibit

Stick it - interactively.

TORONTO, ON. On September 28th 2012, the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives (CLGA) will play host to an exhibit compiled of decades of archived LGBTTQ identified pin buttons. Earlier this summer, these buttons were launched online for public review) in an effort to collect and identify the stories and meanings behind their creation. The exhibit, Pushing Buttons™ will act as a facilitator for the community to engage with the pin buttons in a variety of different media forms (audio, video, and print) while simultaneously acquiring archival information and stories from the attendees. Pushing Buttons™ will be broadcast through live stream for Canadians to share in the full exhibition experience.

For decades, buttons have voiced political statements worn by the masses to spread awareness during specific campaigns worldwide. Since their original design patent in 1896, the simple communication abilities of a single button have passed the test of time. Specifically for the LGBT community, buttons have been used for a variety of reasons ranging through forms of protest, to conveying messages without use of the spoken word. Creator William Craddock comments, “The Pin Button Project is about sharing history through the display of photographs of pin buttons that represent a range of causes, events, organization, and identities from our various pasts. It's about provoking memory and inviting individuals to share their memories with others. It's a place for discussion about the past - and about the present. And it is, of course, a place to look at and enjoy all of the visual appeal that these buttons from the past have to offer.”

This particular exhibit marks the first ever LIVE stream event from the CLGA. General Manager Scott Kettles speaks to his enthusiasm regarding this particular milestone. “we’re thrilled to grant access to our content through new and exciting digital mediums. We are continuing to enhance and innovate the ways in which we distribute our archival pieces and The Pin Button Project marks an important place in the CLGAs history, contributing to our ongoing objective to keep LGBTTQ stories alive.

The Pushing Buttons exhibit opens on September 28th, 2012 with a public reception at the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives (34 Isabella St., 2nd and 3rd Floor) from 7:30pm - 10pm. Complementing the launch will be “create your own button” stations that will allow attendees to make their mark and contribute to the exhibit. For more information, visit http://pinbuttons.ca.

About Pushing Buttons:

Pushing Buttons reimagines the space of The Pin Button Project, an online experience that engages individual memory and storytelling through the exhibition of a rich history of LGBTQ+ buttons from the holdings of the CLGA. In the online project, users engage with the artifacts and each other by asking questions, stating opinions, and sharing personal stories. In Pushing Buttons, the online is brought into the physical as space and content are reimagined into an enveloping and interactive experience that turns the spectator into witness and calls attention to the historical and present roles of various buttons, from social activism in the streets to social media activism on the web. 

About The Pin Button Project

The Pin Button Project is an online interactive exhibition and oral history project featuring pin buttons from the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives. Viewers engage by asking questions, stating opinions, and sharing their own stories.

About Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives

The Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives was established to aid in the recovery and preservation of LGBT histories. Its mission: to acquire, preserve, organize, and give public access to information and materials in any medium, by and about LGBT people, primarily produced in or concerning Canada. To support this function, the Archives also maintain significant non-archival collections, which include a research library, international subject files, and an international collection of queer periodicals. It is the CLGA’s mandate to make this information available to the public for education and research. Over the years, the CLGA has helped hundreds of people - students, artists, journalists, lawyers, filmmakers complete numerous projects inside and outside of the LGBT community. 

Website: http://www.pinbuttons.ca

Twitter: @PinButtons

Facebook: http://facebook.com/ThePinButtonProject

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