‘Nothing about us without us’: the radical history of UK HIV activism
Monday 1 December 2025, 5:30pm to 6:30pm
Venue
The Library Events Space A385Open to
All Lancaster University (non-partner) students, Alumni, Applicants, External Organisations, Families and young people, Postgraduates, Prospective International Students, Prospective Postgraduate Students, Prospective Undergraduate Students, Public, Staff, UndergraduatesRegistration
Free to attend - registration requiredRegistration Info
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Event Details
The HIV epidemic can be viewed as a global mass disabling event. Since the very first cases were reported, affected communities have participated in radical activism to fill a void left by governments slow or unwilling to act.
The HIV epidemic can be viewed as a global mass disabling event. Since the very first cases were reported, affected communities have participated in radical activism to fill a void left by governments slow or unwilling to act.
In the UK, this activism has included empowering HIV positive people to live and die with dignity, challenging government inaction through protest, and campaigning for fair access to healthcare. This World AIDS Day and Disability History Month, join LGBTQIA+ and disability historian, Jaime Starr, to explore the ways HIV activists in the UK have dramatically changed society.
Speaker Bio:
Jaime Starr (they/them) is a queer, deaf and disabled oral historian and curator working with museums and archives to share LGBTQIA+ and disabled activist movement histories. Through their oral history practice, they documented the life story of Jonathan Blake, one of the first, and longest surviving British HIV+ people. Jaime is a Northern Bridge PhD scholar at Newcastle University, where they are mapping undocumented LGBTQIA+ material in the Tyne & Wear regional archives.
Speaker
Peoples History Museum, Manchester
Jaime Starr (they/them) is a queer, deaf and disabled oral historian and curator working with museums and archives to share LGBTQIA+ and disabled activist movement histories. Through their oral history practice, they documented the life story of Jonathan Blake, one of the first, and longest surviving British HIV+ people. Jaime is a Northern Bridge PhD scholar at Newcastle University, where they are mapping undocumented LGBTQIA+ material in the Tyne & Wear regional archives.
Contact Details
Name | Hannah Rosbrook-Brown |
Website |