On Oct. 5, the Supreme Court handed down a decision with major implications for HIV prevention and public health in Canada. In a 9-0 ruling, the court found that people infected with HIV must disclose their HIV status to their sexual partners.
Dr Mark Tyndal on Supreme Court decision
News curated from other sources
US: New report from the Williams Institute examines the enforcement of Indiana’s HIV-related criminal donation laws
Enforcement of HIV Criminalization in Indiana: Donation Laws
July 23, 2024
US: Sex workers convicted of aggravated prostitution because of their HIV status to be removed from Sex Offender Registry
Tennessee agrees to remove sex workers with HIV from sex offender registry
July 18, 2024
Malaysia: Latest attempt to amend the Prevention and Control of Infectious Diseases Act retains many of its controversial provisions
Act 342 Amendment Bill Treats Infection Like A Criminal Offence
July 16, 2024
US: New HIV criminalisation law goes into effect in Tennessee
CHLP denounces new law in Tennessee that further criminalizes people living with HIV
July 3, 2024
US: CHLP and Oklahoma advocates successfully oppose sweeping STI criminalisation Bill
STI Criminalization Bill stopped in Oklahoma
June 28, 2024
News by the HIV Justice Network
Meet HJN at AIDS 2024
July 16, 2024