Youth Health and Rights Coalition LOGO DESIGN CONTEST: WIN $50 iTunes Giftcard!

The Youth Health and Rights Coalition (YHRC) is inviting you to design a logo for the Coalition that reflects the YHRC’s commitment to promoting positive Sexual and Reproductive Rights and Health (SRRH) outcomes for young people in the developing world. The winning logo will be chosen as the official YHRC logo and brand future YHRC publications and our online presence.

We would like to thank those who submitted logo designs over the last few weeks.  In order to expand the pool of possible logos from which to choose, the Youth Health and Rights Coalition has decided to EXTEND the logo design contest to DECEMBER 10 (by midnight Eastern Time). Additionally, we will REWARD the winning submission with a $50 iTunes giftcard!! Below you will find more information about YHRC and the competition rules (including ways to submit your logo) for your reference. We recommend that designs be simple and unique but also relate to YHRC’s goal of advancing the sexual and reproductive rights and health of adolescents and youth.

If you have any questions, or if you would like to join YHRC’s Youth Advisor listserv, please feel free to send your inquiries to youthhealthrights@gmail.com.

Amanda Keifer, Youth Engagement Working Group Lead, and Alexandra Hervish and Lindsay Lincoln, YHRC Co-Chairs.

Please read the Official Logo Design Contest Rules HERE (please read carefully before entering)

 

What is the Youth Health and Rights Coalition (YHRC)? 
The Youth Health and Rights Coalition (YHRC) is comprised of advocates and implementers who, in collaboration with young people and adult allies, are working to advance the sexual and reproductive rights and health (SRRH) of adolescents and youth around the world. The YHRC advocates with key decision makers to prioritize funding and support for comprehensive adolescent and youth SRRH policies and practices. Our goal is to ensure young people in the developing world have the SRRH information, tools, commodities, and quality services necessary to make healthy and informed choices about their own lives.
Who we are:
YHRC is a coalition of more than 20 members working to advance adolescent and youth sexual and reproductive rights and health. YHRC was formed in 2009 in response to the feeling that youth and particularly youth SRH issues were off people’s radar, possibly because of a lack of  a strong collective voice.  We now comprise 23 active organizations who represent a mix of advocates and implementers who inform and complement one another to advocate with key decision makers to prioritize funding and support for comprehensive AYSRRH policies and practices.  
How we operate:
YHRC is run by a rotating co-chair and permanent Secretariat which is Pathfinder. The first year A4Y was the co-chair, the second IWHC, and this past January our third co-chair Alex from PRB was elected. We’re intentionally not just an information-sharing group but involved in collective action.
 
What about Youth Engagement:
With each advocacy action, more deliberately reflect on whether it presents an opportunity to consult with youth and solicit their input.  YHRC has developed list of youth advisors interested in an opportunity to engage with organizations at the forefront of advocacy and programming to advance SRRH of adolescents and youth in low-resource settings.
Requirements for youth participation:
o   15-24 age cohort
o   Respond to email or Facebook requests for input on and participation in specific advocacy actions
o   Possibly interact with one another via a new Facebook group that will provide young leaders from communities around the world the ability to share best practices and participate in discussion s and forums around youth SRRH issues

ICPD Global Youth Forum: What you need to know to participate

The International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) is approaching its 20th anniversary. In 2014, advocates, governments, and experts will come together to assess our progress since the landmark ICPD Cairo took place in 1994. ICPD+20 will review the implementation of the ICPD Programme of Action and will influence the future of global population and development policy at national, regional, and global levels.

A critical aspect of this review is the ICPD Global Youth Forum. This forum, which will take place December 4-6, 2012, in Bali, Indonesia, will include nearly 1000 youth leaders from every country.

According to the UN: “Representing the 43% of the world’s population under age 25, they will convene in Bali to develop official recommendations for the United Nations Development agenda. But they will not be the only ones contributing. Around the world, youth leaders will connect locally and electronically to provide a shared response to the social, economic and human rights challenges and opportunities faced by their generation. This is the moment when the 43% take control of our shared future.”

There are a five key issues for which the Forum will develop global recommendations:

  • Staying Healthy: Creating communities, policies and services that respect individual health needs and human rights, ensuring every young person achieves their full potential.
  • Comprehensive Education: Providing all young people, regardless of gender, disability, race or economic status, with good quality education so that they are empowered to be active citizens
  • Transitions to decent employment for youth: Overcoming the challenges of youth unemployment and harnessing the potential of youth to drive development that creates a healthier, more equal and more sustainable world for everyone.
  • Sexuality, Families and Rights: Exploring the relationship between sexuality, family formation and sexual and reproductive health and human rights amongst adolescents and youth or family planning as a part of protecting sexual and reproductive health and rights.
  • Fully Inclusive CIVIC participation: Supporting and building the capacity of youth leaders and the ability of governments, institutions and businesses to work collaboratively to create a more equal, more sustainable planet.

While the delegates and experts have already been chosen, YOU can be part of the conversation! HERE are some ways that you can participate in the Bali Global Youth Forum:

We will be posting regular updates in the coming weeks AND we will be posting content LIVE FROM BALI so stay tuned! 

 

First Annual Day of the Girl Child Roundup!

Yesterday (October 11) was the first ever International Day of the Girl Child.

Many blogs and articles were written/ posted on this topic yesterday (I have listed a few of our favorites below), but our very own Adolescent Girls’ Advocacy and Leadership Initiative (AGALI) was featured in a blog on RH Reality Check. See the full article below!

DAY OF THE GIRL ARTICLES:

 

 

AGALI Celebrates the First Annual Day of the Girl 

by Emily Teitsworth, Program Coordinator

*re-posted from RH Reality Check

Today, from Lilongwe, Malawi to Guatemala City, Guatemala, Fellows of the Adolescent Girls Advocacy & Leadership Initiative (AGALI) are celebrating the first annual Day of the Girl Child.

For the first time, the United Nations General Assembly has adopted a resolution to declare October 11th as the International Day of the Girl Child, establishing a special day to recognize girls’ rights and the unique challenges facing girls and young women globally. Since then, activists around the world have been advocating for government recognition of the Day of the Girl Child and planning events to commemorate this historic day.

On this first annual Day of the Girl Child, I am excited to share the inspiring work being done by some of our 89 AGALI Fellows in Central America and Sub-Saharan Africa.

Guatemala

AGALI partner organization the National Association Against Child Abuse (CONACMI) is organizing a press conference in Guatemala City to highlight strategies to protect girls’ rights, and to showcase their successful advocacy work. Three additional AGALI Fellows’ organizations will participate in the press conference. CONACMI and other AGALI partner organizations are also involved in a national effort led by Plan International to convince the Guatemalan government to officially recognize October 11th as the Day of the Girl Child.

Ethiopia

Three Ethiopian women took home gold medals at the 2012 London Summer Olympics, all in long-distance running events. AGALI grantee Talent Youth Association (TaYA) will honor these extraordinary athletes at a youth forum celebrating Ethiopian women’s accomplishments in sports. This event will be used as a platform to spark conversations with invited decision makers about how sports can be used to improve girls’ lives in Ethiopia.

Liberia

Only a month before the first Day of the Girl Child, no large-scale events had been planned to honor October 11th in Liberia. Responding to this gap, AGALI partner organization Helping Our People Excel (HOPE) is spearheading a National Girls’ Empowerment forum that will kick off with a workshop where 30 adolescent girls will receive training in media outreach and develop a Manifesto for the Development of the Liberian Girl Child. The girls will then present their Manifesto at a press conference for key stakeholders from the media, UN agencies, and government institutions.

Malawi

The AGALI-affiliated Adolescent Girls Advocacy Network (AGANET) is collaborating with UNICEF and other organizations to organize several events in celebration of the Day of the Girl Child. AGANET and its partners are advocating with the President of Malawi, Joyce Banda, to make a statement concerning the need for Parliament to raise the age of marriage to 18 years of age. On October 11th, AGANET will hold girl-focused events throughout the country designed to highlight the needs of girls at the grassroots level.

AGALI Fellows around the world have been working for months to organize events that celebrate the potential for adolescent girls to contribute to sustainable and equitable development globally. AGALI thanks all of our Fellows for their dedication to empowering girls to speak out today, and on every day of the year.  For more information on AGALI’s advocacy for girls’ rights, please visit www.agaliprogram.org.

 

Girl Up Q & A with the AGALI team

Girl Up is a campaign of the United Nations Foundation that ”believes that American girls are a part of the solution. We know that girls give, girls talk and girls get involved. This generation of girls cares about global issues and is concerned about the challenges facing other girls around the world.”

Recently, the Girl Up team interviewed Denise Dunning, Director of the Adolescent Girls’ Advocacy and Leadership Initiative (AGALI), and Emily Teitsworth, AGALI Program Coordinator. They spoke about what American girls can do to help their counterparts in developing nations and what their favorite girl power song is at the moment!

Below is the full Q & A text!

Girl Up: What is AGALI?
Denise Dunning: AGALI (Adolescent Girls’ Advocacy Leadership Initiative) is a global movement of leaders who are working to improve adolescent girls’ lives. AGALI provides training, funding, and support to leaders in Africa and Latin America who advocate for laws, policies, and funding to improve girls’healtheducation, and livelihoods.

GU: Can you tell us a little bit about the programs you support?
Emily Teitsworth: We support a wide variety of advocacy and leadership programs, from grassroots efforts targeting village chiefs in Malawi, to a project led by indigenous girls in Guatemala that has been successful in developing and implementing public policies designed by the girls themselves. One of the youngest girls involved in that project started showing up to meetings at age 9 and refused to leave, even though no one below the age of 12 was officially allowed to participate. Now, she’s 15 and is recognized as a leader in her community in Guatemala. When she finishes high school, she plans on studying to become a lawyer so that she can fight for the rights of other girls like her.
DD: Recognizing that AGALI leaders have the greatest understanding of the challenges facing girls in their communities, AGALI supports a diverse range of initiatives developed by AGALI Fellows. These programs include efforts to improve girls’ ability to stay in school, ensure that girls have access to sexual and reproductive health services and information, and that girls are economically empowered.

GU: What do you hope to accomplish with AGALI in the future? What are your goals?
DD: My goal for the AGALI program is to continue to improve girls’ lives around the world by sustaining the tremendous work of the AGALI Fellows. I hope that in the future, we will also be able to expand AGALI to additional countries so that we can empower leaders to advocate for the policies, programs, and funding that girls need to live safe, fulfilled lives.

GU: What is the best part of your job?
ET: One of the absolute best parts of my job is getting to spend time with inspiring girl leaders. A few months ago, I interviewed a teenage girl who was the Deputy Speaker of Liberia’s national Children’s Parliament. She told me about how when she first joined the Children’s Parliament, she was nervous to speak out, especially in front of the boys. Now, she is a champion for other girls and has helped advocate for the passage of national laws and policies that protect girls’ rights!

GU: Wow! That sounds so inspiring. What role can American girls play in helping girls around the world?
ET: I think one of the most important things that American girls can do is to spend time learning about the real lives of girls in other countries. Many of them have faced obstacles that we can barely imagine and have come up with ingenious solutions to address the problems facing their communities. I’ve always found that when I take the time to really imagine myself in someone else’s shoes, it helps me to better understand their life and to learn from them.
DD: American girls can encourage their friends, families, and communities to support girls around the world in whatever way they can!

GU: What is your girl power song at the moment? 
ET: Full disclosure: I’ve been a big country music fan ever since I was a young girl growing up in rural Oregon! One of my favorite girl power songs to sing along to in the car is “Bye Bye” by Jo Dee Messina.
DD: ”Unwritten” by Natasha Bedingfield

GU: What is your favorite inspirational quote?
ET: ”If you have come to help me, you are wasting your time; but if you are here because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together.” –Lilla Watson, Australian Aboriginal Elder
DD: “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us…. As we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.” -Marianne Williamson

GU: Who is your female role model?
ET: One woman who I have always admired is the author Arundhati Roy. She’s a brilliant writer and activist who speaks out on environmental and political issues both in her native India and around the world.
DD: That’s a tough question – I’ve admired so many women in my personal and professional life. One who stands out is my Girl Scout troop leader from high school – she is an amazing community leader who leads by her example. She is generous, compassionate, and committed to helping others and has transformed the lives of so many girls.

GU: If you had to choose only one: pizza or chocolate?
DD: Chocolate, for sure!! I think it’s about time someone invented chocolate pizza!
ET: I think it’s about time someone invented chocolate pizza!

GU: Yum, chocolate pizza! Thanks for taking the time to talk to us today, Denise and Emily! Keep up the amazing work.

Wilson Center Event: The Challenges and Benefits of Addressing Young Adolescent Reproductive Health

A few weeks ago, I attended a great event at the Woodrow Wilson Center on “The Challenges and Benefits of Addressing Young Adolescent Reproductive Health.” The event, hosted by the Environmental Change and Security Program (ECSP), featured a stunning group of panelists covering the spectrum of groups working on sexual and reproductive health and rights of young people.

Below is an article, by ECSP staffer Kate Diamond, on the subject.

 

There are 1.2 billion adolescents (ages 10 to 19) in the world today, accounting for 17 percent of the global population. They are the largest youth cohort in history, and 90 percent live in the developing world. Within that broad age group, very young adolescents (ages 10 to 14) often fall through the cracks of international development work, especially when it comes to health, and reproductive health in particular.

“We’ve been reluctant to really directly reach out to very young adolescents because we fear community backlash or we don’t really know how to work with very young adolescents,” said Cate Lane, USAID’s youth health advisor, speaking at the Wilson Center on August 28.

Lane, along with Laurette Cucuzza, the senior technical advisor for reproductive health at CEDPA, and Gene Roehlkepartain, president of child advocacy group Search Institute, discussed the challenges and benefits of working with 10- to 14-year-olds on sensitive but important sexual and reproductive health issues.

An Overlooked Age Group

“Adolescents are often lumped into groups, such as 10 to 19, or 15 to 24, but there are vast differences between adolescents of different ages,” said Cucuzza. Programs that ignore those differences, she continued, “often miss the windows of opportunity for early and nuanced approaches that can have lasting effects and provide protection from a myriad of health risks that contribute to high maternal and child mortality and morbidity.”

One reason why sexual and reproductive health work often bypasses the younger adolescent group, according to Lane, is the concern that “if you talk about sex, and you talk about sexuality, then the young people are going to want to go out and experiment.”

But, she continued, “we know from the research around comprehensive sexuality education that that’s really not true. That if you provide young people with comprehensive sexuality education they’re more likely to delay, they’re more likely to use contraception, they have fewer partners.”

Developmental Assets: A Framework for Engagement

Because of their age and social and cultural norms that may complicate sexual and reproductive health efforts, figuring out how to best to target very young adolescents can be difficult. Roehlkepartain advocated a “positive development” approach – one that builds on so-called “developmental assets,” or characteristics, both in adolescents and in their communities, that support healthy personal development.

Through extensive survey-based research in the United States (currently being expanded internationally), Search Institute has identified 40 of these assets, ranging from having family and community support to valuing delayed sexual debuts. Encouraging these assets can lead to a cycle of positive development for adolescents, said Roehlkepartain. Based on the institute’s U.S.-based work, youth with more developmental assets are less likely to engage in or support risky behavior, like violence, drinking, or sexual activity.

Most recently, Search Institute surveyed adolescents in Bangladesh, Honduras, Jordan, and Rwanda to assess correlations between asset levels and health, violence prevention, livelihood development, education, and civic engagement. The results suggest that developmental assets are universally applicable.

“Even with very different populations in each country, we’re finding similar patterns of asset levels. And that…doesn’t vary much by age, gender, or city or village. So it seems to be a fairly stable measure across a wide variety of young people,” said Roehlkepartain.

The Necessity of an Integrated Approach

Because of the impact developmental assets can have on a range of behaviors across cultures, Roehlkepartain likened their impact to preventive programming. “We think that focusing on identifying and building the strengths in young people complements the efforts to prevent the problems” that so many youth programs target, like health, education, and workforce development, he said.

CEDPA’s on-the-ground work in India, Nepal, Nigeria, and South Africa shows the importance of cross-cutting interventions that empower youth and create supporting environments for addressing sexual and reproductive health. For example, reproductive health programming in India’s Jharkhand state included “intensive advocacy with parents, media, and communities from the outset,” and was able to survive even as comparable programs in other states were coming under increasing criticism, Cucuzza said.

In Nigeria’s Akwa Ibom state, where “HIV prevalence is high, primary school attendance is low, and poverty is rampant,” village chiefs worked alongside religious and women leaders to create an integrated approach, teaching adolescents vocational skills, providing sexual and reproductive education, and improving primary school attendance,  she said.

There is a tendency to only deal with “positive development” – empowering youth and strengthening preventive behaviors and norms – once more pressing, immediate problems have been tackled, said Roehlkepartain. But “what we’re learning in developing contexts, which I think is true for this country as well, is that by paying attention to developing and empowering children and youth in all walks of life…is part of what lifts them up.”

“It’s not just waiting until they’ve got everything else solved,” he said. “It all goes together.”

Pursuing positive development could hold promise for USAID and the myriad goals it has relating to the health and wellbeing of young people, said Lane.

“If we are to really achieve USAID’s goals of reducing high-risk pregnancies, unsafe abortions, HIV, reducing maternal mortality, improving child survival, increasing the use of contraception, stabilizing population growth,” she said, “we really have to understand how we instill and sustain positive behaviors among this group of very young adolescents instead of trying to change those negative and often entrenched behaviors when people are older.”

 Event Resources:

 Photo Credit: Sean Peoples.

Join the YHRC Youth Advisory Board!

Youth Health and Rights Coalition 

Seeking youth advisors to advance

Sexual and Reproductive Rights and Health (SRRH)

  • Interested in an opportunity to engage with a group of organizations at the forefront of advocacy and programming to advance the SRRH of adolescents and youth in low-resource settings?

Willing to provide input and help shape key advocacy actions? Then please join our team as a youth advisor to the Youth Health and Rights Coalition.

 

Who are we? The Youth Health and Rights Coalition (YHRC) comprises of advocates and implementers who, in collaboration with young people and adult allies, are working to advance the sexual and reproductive rights and health (SRRH) of adolescents and youth around the world. The YHRC advocates with key decision makers to prioritize funding and support for comprehensive adolescent and youth sexual and reproductive rights and health (SRRH) policies and practices. Our goal is to ensure young people in the developing world have the SRRH information, tools, commodities, and quality services necessary to make healthy and informed choices about their own lives.

Why are we reaching out to you? While youth represent nearly half of the Coalition’s active member organization’s representatives, we seek to expand youth input and engagement in our work.

What does it require to be a youth advisor?

  • Fit into the 15-29 year old youth cohort.
  • Engage with the Coalition in response to email or Facebook requests for input on and participation in specific advocacy actions. For example, in the next few months, we envisage engaging youth advisors in analyses of US Government policies, an e-forum on youth engagement, and congressional outreach.
  • Interact with one another via a new Facebook group that will provide young leaders from communities around the world the ability to share best practices and participate in discussions and forums around youth SRRH issues.
  • We would like to kick off this group by holding a YHRC Logo Design Contest. The YHRC is encouraging young people to design a logo for the Coalition, keeping in mind our commitment to youth SRRH issues. The winning logo will be chosen as the official YHRC logo and brand future YHRC publications and our online presence.

 

For more information or if interested in becoming a youth advisor, please email youthhealthrights@gmail.com

Thoughts on 2012 International Youth Day

The following opinion piece is a re-posting from Kenny Ayeni, Communications Coordinator at LEAP Africa. The piece originally appeared on Punch Nigeria online.

Every year, since 2000, the United Nations has celebrated the International Youth Day on August 12. This year, the Day’s event which held last Sunday, is aptly titled, “Building A better World, partnering with youth”. This is in recognition of the need to encourage youths to be ambitious and recommendations to the older generation to partner with young people to achieve their goals. In addition, the UN is showcasing outstanding works done by young people around the world whilst also emphasising the need to improve and strengthen connections with them in order to advance their quality of life.

The 2012 event is geared towards providing opportunities for the improvement of youth organisations and for UN Member States worldwide to fortify partnerships with youths through diverse and innovative means. This would include exploring the ways through which the UN, member states, civil society, the private sector, the academic sector and humanitarians could team up and work with young people to improve their living standards as well as improve their education, employment opportunities, entrepreneurship, citizenship and, most importantly, human rights.

The UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, is quoted as saying that, “to unleash the power of young people, we need to partner with them”. Also, in an address by Kofi Annan, United Nations-Arab League joint special envoy for Syria and seventh UN Secretary-General, on the International Youth Day in 2004, he urged the international community “to prepare for the future, so as to promote solidarity between generations today”. Consequently, countries across the world are devoting resources to youth development to ensure that their youths are adequately trained and prepared to address personal, organisational and societal challenges. The case should not be different in Nigeria. There is an urgent need for the government to invest in youths to create a sustainable and successful future, most especially to survive in a competitive and changing world that we live in.

In order to effectively alleviate global challenges faced by the youth, such as poverty, gender discrimination, human trafficking, drug abuse, high illiteracy and unemployment, there is an urgent need for stakeholders to work together. This underscores the importance of establishing a global strategy to build a better world; a world that is free and fair. A world that recognises that if the youth are constructively engaged, they will emerge as great leaders and become useful resources to their nations.

It is germaine to mention that there are organisations in Nigeria that are dedicated to working to achieve this year’s theme. One such organisation is the Leadership, Effectiveness, Accountability and Professionalism (LEAP) Africa, a non-profit organisation committed to developing dynamic, innovative and principled leaders. For the past decade, the organisation has trained more than 20, 000 youths and partnered with many youth-led organisations in an attempt to amplify their leadership capacity. The organisation also offers training programmes targeted at disadvantaged youths aged between 14 and 35 years through its various leadership programmes such as the Leadership, Ethics and Civics Programme, Employability Programme and Values and Leadership Skills Programme.

It is instructive that beneficiaries of such programmes have initiated high impact social change projects in their local communities across Nigeria and Africa. These young innovators are championing global discussions in areas like climate change resolution. Locally, they are also contributing to national issues including agriculture, corruption, human rights, and providing basic health care to the underserved — in an attempt to alleviate social and economic problems in the society. Beyond these activities, seminars to impart knowledge to their peers and young adults on topical issues ranging from teenage pregnancies to entrepreneurship are encouraged.

The actions of these young people demonstrate that leadership is not a position but an act that clearly defies the belief that only successful and influential individuals can positively transform lives and influence situations in their community.

To celebrate the 2012 International Youth Day, the United Nations and LEAP Africa urge non-governmental organisations, government, private sector and well-meaning citizens to partner with and support young people in the key areas of need such as employment, entrepreneurship, political inclusion, citizenship and protection of rights, education and sexual/reproductive health.

The dedicated and collective efforts of organisations and citizens towards establishing positive and strategic youth engagement on a national scale would eventually lead to improvements in the global state of affairs.

•Ayeni is the Communications Coordinator, LEAP Africa. kayeni@leapafrica.org

Remarks for U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on International Youth Day

Press Statement

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Secretary of State

Washington, DC

12 August 2012

There are more than three billion people under the age of 30. Young people represent a growing class who are yearning to have their voices heard. But in too many places around the world, the needs and concerns of young women and men continue to be marginalized. Countries are failing to provide young people with the chance to realize even their most basic aspirations. Their political will has too often been suppressed. Yet they are inextricably tied to the problems we all face, from security issues and the economy to changes in governments and society.

We have all witnessed over the last two years that youth are shaping the political landscape of their countries. I have seen young people driving innovations and economic and social entrepreneurship in every region of the world. I believe the best solutions to our shared challenges will come from harnessing the energy and creativity of youth.

As we celebrate the achievements of young people, it is incumbent on the leaders of today – in politics, civil society, the private sector, academia, and scientific fields – to mentor and to cultivate the next generation. It is only through partnership that we can equip young people with the skills, resources, and networks they need, while also empowering them to be agents of change in their communities. The United States stands with young people everywhere as we work to build a brighter future together.

A call for U.S. recognition of National Youth HIV and AIDS Awareness Day

This week, the 19th International AIDS Conference is being held in Washington, DC. Over 20,000 scientists, researchers, activists, and policy makers have gathered in the United States capital to discuss “Turning the Tide Together” and how to create an “AIDS-free generation.”

Among those fighting to end the AIDS epidemic in the United States is Lawrence Stallworth III, a young, HIV-positive activist. Yesterday, Lawrence wrote an amazing blog in the Huffington Post calling for President Barack Obama and members of the US Congress to officially recognize April 10 as National Youth HIV & AIDS Awareness Day.

You can read Lawrence’s blog HERE. 

Tell us what you think: Why are youth critical to achieving an “AIDS-free generation?”

Public Health Institute (PHI) at the International AIDS Conference 2012

Join the Public Health Institute (PHI) at the International AIDS Conference

PHI will be active throughout the IAC.  Please join us, our project teams and our partners at the following events:

PHI/Global Health Fellows Program-II Reception

Monday, July 23, 5:30pm to 7:00pm, GHFP-II Training Room, 1201 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC

Please join staff and fellows from PHI programs around the world for a special reception on the occasion of the International AIDS Conference. Enjoy hors d’oeuvres and refreshments while learning about the diverse and innovative ways in which PHI is tackling the HIV/AIDS epidemic. (RSVP at globalhealth@phi.org)

 

Global Youth Coalition on HIV/AIDS (GYCA) Youth Roundtable

Monday, July 23, 8:30am to 10:30am, Busboys and Poets, 1025 5th Street NW, Washington, DC

PHI’s GYCA and the Youth Health and Rights Coalition (YHRC) will be co-hosting an interactive breakfast roundtable for adolescent- and youth-focused coalitions. We hope for this to be an opportunity for participating coalitions to explore opportunities for collaboration and coordination to further promote the health and rights of young people.

 

What Works for Women and Girls

Sunday, July 22, 11:15am to 1:15pm, Satellite Session Room 7

A Reason to Celebrate: What Works for Women & Girls: Evidence for HIV/AIDS Interventions (SUSA23): Join us to celebrate the launch of the updated, award-winning website What Works for Women & Girls: Evidence for HIV/AIDS Interventions. Come learn about what’s new in what works for women and girls; how others are utilizing the resource and how it can be useful in your work.

 

Tuesday, July 24, 4:45pm to 5:45pm, Main Stage, Women’s Networking Zone (WNZ)

What Works for Women & Girls: Advocacy Workshop for Gender Sensitive Interventions: This highly interactive, practical workshop invites participants to answer the question:  how do you advocate for an evidence-based, gender-sensitive response to the HIV epidemic in your country? Participants are encouraged to come with data about the epidemic in their country, including who is most at risk and the conditions for women and girls living with HIV. Participants will leave with concrete strategies and tools to more effectively advocate for gender-specific programming and policies in their countries. 

 

Wednesday, July 25, 7:00am to 8:30am, Mini Room 3

Messages that Matter: Reaching the World’s Women with Effective, Evidence-Based HIV Prevention Strategies (WESA06): This session will promote cross-learning and highlight why prevention strategies for women must be different than those for men, what is working for women within the US and internationally to reduce risk of HIV infection, and how emerging structural and biomedical strategies can play a role in future prevention efforts for women.

 

Thursday, July 26, 7:00am to 8:30am, Mini Room 1

From Evidence to Programming: Gender and Gender-Based Violence in the HIV and AIDS Response (THSA02): The session will discuss evidence on addressing gender-based violence (GBV) in HIV programming, and review how the evidence is being put into practice through guidelines and programs. It will focus on current challenges, including taking gender interventions to scale, and measuring program impact. This session will complement the US Government session on PEPFAR GBV program guidance by discussing the “why” behind the guidance.

 

Adolescent Girls’ Advocacy and Leadership Initiative (AGALI)

 Monday, July 23, 12:30pm to 2:30 pm, Poster Exhibition Hall on Level 2

Strengthening global advocacy for adolescent girls: Lessons learned from the Adolescent Girls´ Advocacy and Leadership Initiative”

 

Coalition for the Advancement of Multipurpose Innovations (CAMI)

 Thursday, July 26, 12:30pm to 2:30pm, Poster Exhibition Hall on Level 2

CAMI and our Initiative for Multipurpose Prevention Technologies (IMPT) partners are presenting a poster entitled “Simultaneous risks, simultaneous protection: the critical path to “multipurpose” prevention products for women.” Dr. Polly Harrison will be at the exhibit to answer questions and provide MPT informational materials.

 

Thursday, July 26, 6:30pm to 8:30pm, Mini Room 1

The Population Council and CAMI, along with AVAC, CONRAD, USAID, and WHO, are co-convening a satellite session, New Products, New Paradigms: Combination Products for Women.”  Dr. Helen Rees of the Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute, South Africa, and Dr. Debra Birnkrant of the U.S. FDA, will co-chair the session.

 

Wednesday, July 25, 6:30pm to 8:30pm, Session Room 6

The International Partnership for Microbicides (IPM) and Women Deliver are holding a satellite session entitled Advancing the Integration of HIV and Sexual and Reproductive Health”.