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Presented By: School of Public Health

The Impact of Law on People Living with HIV, and the Public Health Impact of Criminalization of HIV Exposure and Transmission

Matthew Weait's 's research centers on the impact of law on people living with HIV and AIDS, and he has worked with a number of local, regional, national and international organisations including the WHO and UNAIDS. His recent projects have included a review of communicable disease legislation in the WHO European region and a Discussion Paper on a rights-based approach to HIV/AIDS in the EU.

In 2010 he was appointed to be a member of the Technical Advisory Group for the new Global Commission on HIV and Law. He is currently working on a research project, partly funded by the Wellcome Trust, on the response of civil society organisations and activists to HIV criminalisation in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden.

He graduated with a BA in Law, and an MPhil in Criminology from the University of Cambridge before going to work at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies at the University of Oxford, where he researched his DPhil under the supervision of Dr Keith Hawkins. He was awarded a Queen Mother Major Scholarship by the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple and was called to the Bar of England and Wales in 1999, but does not practise. He has held visiting academic positions at the American Bar Foundation, Cardozo Law School and the University of British Columbia. He was recently awarded an MA (with distinction) in Creative Writing at Birkbeck College. His story "Air and Sea and Salt" was published in Issue 5 of the Mechanics Institute Review (September 2008), and another "the days he had seen", was shortlisted for the 2009 Bridport Prize. He is in the process of completing his first novel.

Sponsored by Global Public Health Initiate, Institute for the Study of Women and Gender, Sex & Justice Conference
Contact Information: Chinyere neale, nealee@umich.edu, 615-3514

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