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[News/People] [Canada] Trans academic wins human rights award   Message List  
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Xtra.ca, Canada


Trans academic wins human rights award

HIV/AIDS / Namaste illuminates trans, bi and swinger lives

Shawn Syms / National / Monday, July 13, 2009


[Photo: UNCOVERING TRUTHS. Activist Viviane Namaste wants to make
visible the HIV prevention and treatment needs of the bi, trans,
swinger and sex-work communities. Pictured above at right, Namaste
with Richard Elliott of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network.
(Le-Ann Dolan, ACT)]


Noted Montreal academic, author and activist Viviane Namaste has been
awarded the 2009 Canadian Award for Action on HIV/AIDS and Human
Rights for her efforts to address the HIV prevention and treatment
needs of trans people, bisexuals and the swingers community.

Namaste accepted the award in Toronto Jun 12, at From Evidence and
Principle to Policy and Practice, the first annual Symposium on HIV,
Law and Human Rights organized by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network.
The award, co-presented by the international advocacy group Human
Rights Watch, has been presented annually since 2002. Namaste was
nominated for the award by Montreal community organizer Jenn Clamen.

Presenting the award, Clamen described Namaste as "a personal hero"
for her efforts to understand and address the specific HIV-related
needs of the bi, trans and migrant sex work communities. "There are
people in our lives who display such bravery, unabashed drive and
brutal strength they inspire the entourage of students around them,
incite change and evolve a community," said Clamen of Namaste,
addressing a packed house at Toronto law school Osgoode Hall.

Namaste, who is the research chair in HIV/AIDS and sexual health at
the Simone de Beauvoir Institute at Concordia University, provided the
crowd with a chilling education about increasing HIV rates among trans
sex workers around the world. When she first got involved in trans HIV
issues in the early '90s, she said, the prevalence of HIV among trans
people was double that among gay men.

Today for trans people involved in sex work, things are even worse. In
Lisbon, for example, almost 47 percent of trans sex workers are
HIV-positive; in Atlanta, the number is 68 percent. Namaste cited a
study of drug-using transsexual and transvestite sex workers in Rome;
after four years, every participant in the study had HIV.

"Where is the political will around this population and its reality?"
Namaste asked the assembled lawyers and community advocates. "How is
it that transsexuals have the highest rates of HIV seroprevalence in
the industrialized world, and they are still not recognized as a
vulnerable population in Canadian state policy and in international
policy?"

Namaste's current research involves understanding the HIV prevention
needs of bisexual men and women and Montreal's active swingers
community, and includes an informational website at polyvalence.ca.
"Why is it that bisexuality is something that we talk about all the
time in HIV work — but you can never find a poster or pamphlet
specific adapted to the realities of bi men and women in the Canadian
context?" she asked.

Also awarded the same evening was Michaela Clayton, a widely respected
lawyer and activist from Namibia who co-founded the AIDS and Rights
Alliance of Southern Africa (ARASA), a regional network of 35
organizations working in partnership across southern Africa to defend
and promote human rights in the response to HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis.


©2009 Pink Triangle Press

http://www.xtra.ca/public/National/Trans_academic_wins_human_rights_award-7110.a\
spx




Tue Jul 14, 2009 2:45 am

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Xtra.ca, Canada Trans academic wins human rights award HIV/AIDS / Namaste illuminates trans, bi and swinger lives Shawn Syms / National / Monday, July 13, 2009...
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Jul 14, 2009
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