COLLECTIVE MEMBERS & ROLES

WHY WE MUST ACT NOW

Criminalization is never a solution to health challenges. Communities already heavily surveilled, policed, and criminalized bear the brunt of HIV criminalization — and now are experiencing elevated repression in the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic. A response rooted in policing and criminalization not only undermines public health and human rights, but jeopardizes the long-term survival of our communities. 

The HIV movement can contribute much in this moment. For decades, we have lived experiences of surveillance — how our bodies are counted, attempts to contain us — and law enforcement — as in the case of HIV criminalization; we know these practices are neither neutral nor accountable in supporting the health and well-being of our communities. As more calls for carceral public health strategies emerge from COVID-19 and the widespread social protests on race and the criminal justice system, the HIV movement can and must illuminate how interlinking public health and law enforcement is dangerous, damaging to our communities, and ultimately unsuccessful. 

The Collective prioritizes authentic engagement, activation, training, and leadership rooted in our principles and deep investment in our communities. We are united against the use of policing, prosecution and imprisonment in public health crises, and committed to the abolition of the carceral state, including immigrant detention, which places the profits of the few over the health and lives of our communities. We insist on scrutiny of any forms of policing and surveillance, including those developed or deployed for public health interventions. 

In these efforts, we are dedicated to the leadership, health, safety, and dignity of BIPOC, people living with HIV, people involved in the sex trade, substance users, imprisoned and detained people, people who access harm reduction services, immigrant and migrant populations, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) people, people with disabilities, and no- and low-income people.

OUR PRINCIPLES