On September 12th from 6:30-8:30pm, there will be a launch party for Dr. Alexander McClelland’s new book Criminalized Lives: HIV and Legal Violence at The Spaniel’s Tale.

Please find a link where the book can be preordered in Canada here: https://www.ubcpress.ca/criminalized-lives-1

Please see below for more information on Criminalized Lives and to hear what people are saying:

Canada and the US have been known as hot spots for HIV criminalization where the act of not disclosing one’s HIV-positive status to sex partners has historically been regarded as a serious criminal offence. Criminalized Lives describes how this approach has disproportionately harmed the poor, Black and Indigenous people, gay men, and women. In this book, people who have been criminally accused of not disclosing their HIV-positive status, detail the many complexities of disclosure, and the violence that results from being criminalized.

Accompanied by portraits from queer comic artist Eric Kostiuk Williams, the profiles examine whether the criminal legal system is really prepared to handle the nuances and ethical dilemmas faced everyday by people living with HIV. By offering personal stories of people who have faced criminalization first-hand, McClelland questions common assumptions about HIV, the role of punishment, and the violence that results from the criminal legal system’s legacy of categorizing people as either victims or perpetrators.

“Criminalized Lives is not merely a searing condemnation of how HIV laws ruin lives and remove people living with HIV from the ‘public’ in ‘public health’; the book asks deep and urgent questions about how journalists, criminologists, and scholars are complicit in making vulnerable people’s lives become mediated by violence.”

~Steven W. Thrasher, author of The Viral Underclass: The Human Toll When Inequality and Disease Collide

“Criminalized Lives is a clearly written account of the impacts of HIV criminalization in Canada, the reasons it should end, and the work happening to end it. The book exposes how public health frameworks are used to implement state violence on targeted populations and makes a convincing case against limited reforms that carve out some populations for reduced criminalization while leaving others in the crosshairs of police and courts. It is a wonderful contribution to conversations about criminalization, health, HIV, and racial and gender justice.”

~Dean Spade, author of Mutual Aid: Building Solidarity During This Crisis (and the Next)