criminalization
Is Criminalization of HIV Transmission Effective? Swedish Case Reveals Why the Answer is No
by Marianne Møllmann, Amnesty International
April 23, 2012 - 7:42am (Print)
For anyone who cares about human rights from a health and discrimination angle, recent cases criminalizing HIV transmission raise multiple red flags.
Follow Marianne Møllmann on Twitter, @cluelesscamper
Ken Blackwell and Michelle Goldberg Discuss Mississippi's Egg-as-Person Initiative
Chris Matthews talks to the Family Research Council's Ken Blackwell and the Daily Beast's Michelle Goldberg about a radical proposal in Mississippi to define personhood and declare that life begins at conception.
How Criminalization and Stigmatization Perpetuates the AIDS Epidemic
by Alison Yager, HIV Law Project
June 28, 2011 - 8:09am (Print)
HIV testing represents one of the most potent weapons in the fight against HIV. Yet too many individuals who may be at risk of infection continue to avoid testing. This reluctance to test is driven in part by the pervasiveness of HIV stigma.
(VIDEO) Behind Bars: Life Stories of People Affected by the Criminalization of HIV
by Kevin Osborne, International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF)
November 29, 2010 - 7:06pm (Print)
Behind Bars show how a simplistic "law-and-order‟ response to HIV can intensify a climate of denial, secrecy and fear and provide a fertile breeding ground for the spread of HIV.
Responding to the Arrests of Pregnant Women in Alabama
Amanda K. was six months pregnant and went into early labor with a prolapsed umbilical cord. She went to a local hospital for care where she underwent emergency surgery, but unfortunately her son soon died. But, rather than providing the support and compassionate care she and her family needed, the hospital drug tested her. The positive result was used as a basis for reporting her to the police and having her arrested for the crime of “chemical endangerment” of a child.
Caution: Pregnancy May Be Hazardous to Your Liberty
by Lynn Paltrow and Farah Diaz-Tello
March 3, 2010 - 8:00am (Print)
With Congress deadlocked on health reform, some state legislators are working to make it more difficult for women to access health care and much easier for states to put them, and the people who help them, in jail.
