Some criminal lawyers are worried that the Supreme Court has imposed on people prosecuted for not disclosing their HIV-positive status to sex partners a “significant evidentiary burden” to show that they used a condom and that their viral loads were low when they had sex. A pair of decisions handed down on Oct.
Lawyers critique Supreme Court ruling
News curated from other sources
Turkmenistan: UNAIDS launches campaign “Decriminalize” aiming to reduce punitive legal environments affecting key populations
Turkmenistan’s HIV/AIDS Challenges: Silence, Stigma, and Criminalization
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China: People living with HIV in Chongqing to be held criminally liable in cases of alleged HIV transmission
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US: Oklahoma looking at additional criminalisation of sexually transmitted infections
Oklahoma lawmakers want to criminalize spread of genital herpes, chlamydia, HPV and other STDs
April 19, 2024
Zimbabwe: Bill includes HIV in expanded list of STIs with criminal penalties for "deliberate" transmission
Government criminalises deliberate HIV, STIs transmission
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US: Louisiana HIV decriminalisation bill to be revisited at a later date
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April 5, 2024
News by the HIV Justice Network
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March 12, 2024
Global Statement on HIV Is Not A Crime Awareness Day
February 28, 2024
HIV Is Not A Crime Awareness Day goes global!
February 23, 2024
An encouraging start to 2024
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