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All Hands on Deck: Bringing GIPA into Organizational Governance

All Hands on Deck: Bringing GIPA into Organizational Governance. Models for Representation of People Living with HIV and Affected Communities. WELCOME. Please take a moment to think about your experiences engaging people living with HIV and key populations in organizational governance.

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All Hands on Deck: Bringing GIPA into Organizational Governance

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  1. All Hands on Deck: Bringing GIPA into Organizational Governance Models for Representation of People Living with HIV and Affected Communities

  2. WELCOME Please take a moment to think about your experiences engaging people living with HIV and key populations in organizational governance. Card 1– Write one key issue that you are most concerned about or that you find challenging Card 2 – List any resources or tool kits to share with the participants

  3. Inclusive Representation in Decision-Making for Historically Marginalized Groups in HIV Work Models and Key Factors

  4. Inclusion of People Living with HIV and Affected Communities • Historically excluded communities • Legitimate reasons for mistrust • Government officials • Medical providers • Requires:

  5. WHY bring these hands on deck? HUMAN RIGHTS • Democratic rights to participation • Involved in distribution of burdens and benefits • Recognition as integral and valued members of the community • PLHIV and affected communities are part of the solution • Stigma reduction

  6. WHY bring these hands on deck? EFFECTIVENESS • Knowledge of affected communities • Enhances community support and sustainability • Increases democratic legitimacy and accountability • Builds capacity: • affected populations • government, researchers, and healthcare workers

  7. Key Factors • Non-tokenism • Capacity-building • Confidentiality and safety • Diversity within groups/sub-populations • Conflict resolution mechanisms • Anti-oppression approaches to governance and communication

  8. Key Factors: Relationships • Trust-building between communities and organization • Accountability between communities and representatives • Cross-community relationship building

  9. Structures for representative processes • Open seats • Formal reserved seats: • affected communities • subpopulations • Equal status (50% reserved seats) • Core-observer • Caucuses • Delegations

  10. More processes for increasing meaningful inclusion • Community participatory education and selection • Incentives and performance indicators for staff • Publishing the words of affected community members • Forums and pre-meetings of members of marginalized groups • Community-level initiation of strategic documents • Counter (Shadow) Reports • Commit to Free, Prior, Informed Consent (FPIC)

  11. Addressing Key Challenges in Putting GIPA/MIPA into Practice Group Work

  12. Discussion Guide • Select a note taker and someone to report back. • Answer the following for your set of issues: • What do you see as the key points of concern? (Try to select 3.) • Do you know of any successful examples? • Brainstorm ideas. What do you see as the most promising or most creative ideas? • What resources or conditions do you need to put in place for these to happen? • What additional information do you need?

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