In December 2013, The Center for HIV Law and Policy (CHLP) submitted these recommendations to the NYC Administration for Children’s Services (ACS) on its draft of Sexual and Reproductive Health Care for Youth in Foster Care, released in the fall of 2013. ...
admin - 8/22/2020 1:13pm
...
admin - 8/22/2020 1:17pm
...
admin - 1/9/2021 12:52pm
This page on the Social Security Administration (SSA)’s website details which Supplemental Security Income (SSI) actions may be processed after the June 26, 2013 Supreme Court decision in United States v. Windsor. It sets forth instructions for processing ...
admin - 10/9/2021 11:51am
This advocacy letter, submitted by a coalition of community and advocacy organizations to New York City Mayor de Blasio, urges the mayor to issue an executive order prohibiting the practice by police and prosecutors of citing condom possession as evidence ...
admin - 6/15/2017 11:04am
This study examines the association between anticipated stigma – the expectation of rejection or discrimination against by others in the event of seroconversion – and HIV testing behaviors among a sample of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender ...
admin - 3/24/2014 11:39am
This National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs (NCAVP) annual report examines the intersections between LGBTQ and HIV-affected intimate partner violence (IPV) and various forms of oppression that affect these communities. Of the 36.1 percent of victims ...
admin - 1/28/2020 5:58pm
This article assesses how viral load, risk behavior, and health disparities contribute to HIV transmission. The authors found that persons who are unaware of their status are more than three times as likely to transmit HIV than those who are aware of thei ...
admin - 3/24/2014 12:05pm
In Matter of Anthony, the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) reversed an immigration judge's ruling denying a Jamaican gay immigrant's application for protection under the U.N. Convention Against Torture (CAT). The BIA disagreed with the immigra ...
admin - 10/31/2013 4:40pm
This journal article discusses the origins and progression of HIV/AIDS activism in the United States in the 1980s. The author explains how the stigma and the phenomenon of "social death" (in which people are considered "as good as dead" ...
Anonymous (not verified) - 10/7/2013 4:29pm