ACT UP Oral History Project Brings Activists' Words to Your Ears (Regularly Updated)
An online collection of more than two dozen (and growing) interviews with many of the people who were at the forefront of the original AIDS activist movement in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
From ACT UP Oral History Project
After 25 Years, a Landmark HIV Study Is Still Going Strong (April 25, 2009)
The Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) is one for the history books: It's one of the most important HIV/AIDS studies ever done, and over the past 25 years it has brought about many major discoveries.
From National Public Radio
Renowned San Francisco Hospital Marks 25 Years of Fighting HIV (November 27, 2008)
On World AIDS Day, San Francisco General Hospital and members from the surrounding community looked back at 25 years in which they've played a pivotal role in HIV research and activism.
In Bay Area Reporter
History of the HIV Epidemic (PowerPoint) (March 2006)
11 slides detailing the history of the HIV epidemic, focusing on antiretroviral treatment.
From New York/New Jersey AETC
HAART Turns 10 (January/February 2006)
At the 10-year anniversary of the combination HIV treatment era, Guy Pujol takes a look back at how far we've come, and on what the next 10 years may hold in store.
To read PDF, click here
In Survival News, from AIDS Survival Project
Change and Rumors of Change (September/October 2004)
26 AIDS advocates from around the world explain how their communities have changed in the past year.
In GMHC Treatment Issues, from Gay Men's Health Crisis
How AIDS Gave Gays Marriage (May 21, 2004)
In the 1980s, many people assumed that the U.S. AIDS crisis would push gay men even further out of mainstream society; as Christopher Caldwell explains, they couldn't have been more wrong.
In Financial Times
The Encyclopedia of AIDS: : A Social, Political, Cultural, and Scientific Record of the HIV Epidemic (1998) [Archived Article]
Select entries from each of the eight major topic sections of the Encyclopedia, including Basic Science and Epidemiology, Transmission and Prevention, Pathology and Treatment, Impacted Populations, Government and Activism, Policy and Law, Culture and Society and The Global Epidemic.
In The Encyclopedia of AIDS, from Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers
Elizabeth Glaser: Address at the 1992 Democratic National Convention (July 14, 1992) [Archived Article]
Glazer, a widely known AIDS activist who went public about her status after she was infected with HIV during a blood transfusion while giving birth, died in 1994.
From American Rhetoric
Ronald Reagan and AIDS (September/October 2004)
David Salyer recaps some of the highlights of the Gipper's life and presidency -- and laments how he never used his formidable political skills to do something about AIDS during the epidemic's first years.
In Survival News, from AIDS Survival Project
Rewriting the Script on Reagan: Why the President Ignored AIDS (November 14, 2003)
Dartmouth College instructor Michael Bronski offers a thoughtful analysis of Ronald Reagan's decision to pay so little attention to the growing AIDS epidemic during his tenure as president.
In Forward