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Advancing justice, rooted in liberation

CHLP's new strategic plan asks: How do we help create a future where people living with HIV and other stigmatized health conditions live freely—without surveillance, discrimination, stigma, violence, or criminalization? 

HIV Crim Map of USA

Updated: Mapping HIV Criminalization Laws in the U.S.

The new release of CHLP's HIV criminalization maps represent a substantial update resulting from a comprehensive research process and updated methodology based on CHLP’s Sourcebook on State and Federal HIV Criminal Law and Practice.

In the News

Alt: Light purple background with beige, dark purple and red surveillance icons of eyeballs, hands, binary code floating around a black silhouette of a human holding a tablet. At the top, “HIV BASIC: Bodily Autonomy, Surveillance & Informed Consent” is in white block type in red boxes. Black type describes the consensus statement and a QR code and the words “Sign the Statement” is at the bottom in white block type in a purple box. White logo block at the bottom with PWN-USA, TLC, HJN, CHLP and SERO logos.
The HIV Bodily Autonomy, Surveillance, and Informed Consent (HIV BASIC) Collective announces the publication of The Consensus Statement on HIV BASIC, endorsed by more than 150 organizations and 180 individuals.
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Former CHLP summer intern Ken Cavanaugh has been named to the 2026 class of Windy City Times 30 Under 30, which recognizes LGBTQ+ individuals and allies in Chicago who have made significant contributions to the LGBTQ+ community.
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Louisiana took a significant step toward ending HIV criminalization after Governor Jeff Landry signed House Bill 808 into law on May 15, 2026. The legislation narrows the state's HIV exposure law by limiting prosecutions to conduct that poses a substantial likelihood of transmission and creates new protections for people living with HIV.
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Explore the Latest Resources

Explore this collection of more than 1,000 legal resources to support and increase the advocacy power and expertise of attorneys, community members, service providers, and all people living with HIV.

 

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Making positive justice possible.

CHLP is an abolitionist legal and policy organization that envisions and works for a world where HIV and other stigmatized health conditions are no longer criminalized but met with compassion and the resources to thrive.