SYMPOSIUM Price Reduced: “Memory Lives On: Documenting the HIV/AIDS Epidemic”


Rest Stop, 1989
(Jeannie O'Connor AIDS Self-Portraits Collection)
The San Francisco History Center and the LGBTQIA Center are pleased to announce an interdisciplinary symposium exploring and reflecting on topics related to archives and the practice of documenting the stories of HIV/AIDS. The symposium is presented by UCSF Archives and Special Collections, GLBT Historical Society, San Francisco Public Library History Center, and UC Merced Library as part of the NEH grant-funded project “The Bay Area’s Response to the AIDS Epidemic.”

When: October 4th -5th, 2019
Where: UCSF Mission Bay Campus, Byers Auditorium in Genentech Hall, San Francisco

Registration fee reduced to $30 !!
Link updated. Register now

If you have already registered, you will be refunded the difference.

Stencil (Survive AIDS--ACT UP/Golden Gate Records)
Symposium and Program information https://www.library.ucsf.edu/archives/aids/memory-lives-on/
There will be 6 presentation sessions over a day and a half, Keynote talks from Dr. Donald Abrams, Dr. Jay Levy, and Dr. Monica Gandhi, and the pre-conference workshop No More Silence: Opening the Data of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic using Natural Language Processing techniques


Stencil (Survive AIDS--ACT UP/Golden Gate Records)






































Comments

  1. I got an Expedited passport for an unexpected work trip, which went well. I paid more for fast processing and received my visa in two weeks. Service efficiency exceeds my expectations, and I appreciate the government's last-minute travel accommodations. In a hurry, it's worth the additional money. If you have all your documentation in order, the expedited passport process may save the day!

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