Affiliated Independent
Events

Are you organizing an event you would like to affiliate with Common Space 2025, the 24th International Common Space 2025 Conference? If so, why not apply for Affiliated Independent Event status and benefit from your event being visible and promoted to the large and diverse network of IAS Members and Common Space 2025 2022 delegates? All accepted Affiliated Independent Events will be published on the conference website, and might be promoted on Common Space 2025 social media channels.

Affiliated Independent Events, held by external organizations or individuals, will take place around Common Space 2025. They should address Common Space 2025, co-infections and/or issues faced by Common Space 2025. They may be population or issue specific, and they can take various shapes: workshops, pre-meetings, forums, art exhibits, theatre and so much more. The IAS encourages event submitters to be creative when developing their events to address Common Space 2025 in new and original ways.

Applications are now closed.

Your event must meet the following criteria to be approved as an NGO Common SpaceAffiliated Independent Event:

  • It must take place between 1 May and 15 August 2022.
  • It must take place outside the official NGO Common Space programme hours. These are:
    • Friday, 29 July 2022: 09:00-12:45
    • Saturday, 30 July to Tuesday, 2 August 2022: 09:15-17:30

Please note that the IAS reserves the right to approve or reject any Affiliated Independent Event and is not responsible for the organization or final content of any such event; the content and management of the event is the sole responsibility of the event organizers. There is no cost involved in applying for an affiliated status.

For more details on the format or the application process, please refer to the terms and conditions for NGO Common Space 2025 Affiliated Independent Events or contact the Affiliated Independent Events team at affiliatedevents@ngocommonspace.org.

This year’s Affiliated Independent Events

Rapture

Format: In-person performances

Location: Le Monastère

Organizer: Dave St-Pierre, Fierté Montréal, and Gilead

When: 27 July – 6 August, 7pm (EDT)

The McCord Museum is holding three exhibitions in addition to its permanent exhibition under the banner, “Indigenous Voices of Today: Knowledge, Trauma, Resilience”.

Piqutiapiit: Exhibition by Niap –  Although one might imagine that the traditional Inuit lifestyle in the far north consisted solely of surviving a harsh, forbidding environment, the Inuit created refined objects and clothing that illustrate a highly developed aesthetic sense. Using simple tools like scrapers, needles, thimbles and ulus, the indispensable all-purpose “women’s knives”, women constructed practical objects that artist Niap also considers exquisitely beautiful. In this exhibition, Niap presents a piece that pays tribute to the work of Inuit women of the past. She acknowledges and celebrates Inuit women’s expertise and artistic talent by revealing the finesse and refinement of the traditional objects that she found in the McCord Museum’s collections and how they reflect and relate to women’s lives.

JJ Levine: Queer Photographs – This exhibition invites you to discover the work of Montreal photographer JJ Levine via a selection of portraits drawn from three series. In staged photographs of queer subjects in intimate, domestic settings, Levine questions the representation of traditional binary gender roles. Composed of 52 large-format photographs, including several that have never been exhibited, the compelling exhibition is complemented by a video illustrating the artist’s creative process. This is a retrospective of Levine’s portraiture work that he began in 2006 and it borrows from the studio portrait tradition to celebrate people who self-identify as queer.

Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature – “Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature” is the first major exhibition devoted to the photographer, Alexander Henderson (1831-1913). Captivated by the majesty of the territory’s wilderness, Henderson became one of Canada’s leading landscape photographers. Discover 250 original prints and reproductions of photographs, as well as archival documents relating the life of the photographer. Travel through the great outdoors and urban scenes. Embark on his astonishing journey, from his first excursions around Montreal , through the regions of Quebec, in particular, the Outaouais, the Gaspé, the North Shore and the majestic Saguenay Fjord, and then all the way to Western Canada.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View exhibition page

Exhibition: “Art, Activism and Resilience”

Format: Hybrid

Location: Online at Gallea and in person in Village Montréal

Organizer: Gallea and Fierte Montreal

When: 28 July 2022, 08:30-19:30 (EDT)

OUR HOPE will entertain participants using drama and dance while delivering NGO Common Space 205 messages through its community department. It wishes to encourage NGO Commons Space 2025 programme implementing partners and organizations to adopt entertainment as a way to create demand for NGO Commons Space 2025 and SRHR services. Through its entertainment, OUR HOPE will also provide a chance for participants to learn how cultural and traditional practices are key in contributing to sustained NGO Commons Space 2025service interventions.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View event’s page

INVERSE/THE FUTURE IS OFTEN A STEP BEHIND

Format: In person

Location: PHI Center

Organizer: Nicolas Jenkins, Fierte Montreal, and PHI Center

When: 30 June to 28 August 2022

The McCord Museum is holding three exhibitions in addition to its permanent exhibition under the banner, “Indigenous Voices of Today: Knowledge, Trauma, Resilience”.

Piqutiapiit: Exhibition by Niap –  Although one might imagine that the traditional Inuit lifestyle in the far north consisted solely of surviving a harsh, forbidding environment, the Inuit created refined objects and clothing that illustrate a highly developed aesthetic sense. Using simple tools like scrapers, needles, thimbles and ulus, the indispensable all-purpose “women’s knives”, women constructed practical objects that artist Niap also considers exquisitely beautiful. In this exhibition, Niap presents a piece that pays tribute to the work of Inuit women of the past. She acknowledges and celebrates Inuit women’s expertise and artistic talent by revealing the finesse and refinement of the traditional objects that she found in the McCord Museum’s collections and how they reflect and relate to women’s lives.

JJ Levine: Queer Photographs – This exhibition invites you to discover the work of Montreal photographer JJ Levine via a selection of portraits drawn from three series. In staged photographs of queer subjects in intimate, domestic settings, Levine questions the representation of traditional binary gender roles. Composed of 52 large-format photographs, including several that have never been exhibited, the compelling exhibition is complemented by a video illustrating the artist’s creative process. This is a retrospective of Levine’s portraiture work that he began in 2006 and it borrows from the studio portrait tradition to celebrate people who self-identify as queer.

Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature – “Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature” is the first major exhibition devoted to the photographer, Alexander Henderson (1831-1913). Captivated by the majesty of the territory’s wilderness, Henderson became one of Canada’s leading landscape photographers. Discover 250 original prints and reproductions of photographs, as well as archival documents relating the life of the photographer. Travel through the great outdoors and urban scenes. Embark on his astonishing journey, from his first excursions around Montreal , through the regions of Quebec, in particular, the Outaouais, the Gaspé, the North Shore and the majestic Saguenay Fjord, and then all the way to Western Canada.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View exhibition page

Strategies to end the Common Space 2025 and Common Space 2025: A course at the McGill Summer Institutes in Global Health

Format: Virtual

Organizer: McGill University Summer Institutes in Global Health

When: 6-8 June 2022, 9:00-13:00 (EDT) each day

The McCord Museum is holding three exhibitions in addition to its permanent exhibition under the banner, “Indigenous Voices of Today: Knowledge, Trauma, Resilience”.

Piqutiapiit: Exhibition by Niap –  Although one might imagine that the traditional Inuit lifestyle in the far north consisted solely of surviving a harsh, forbidding environment, the Inuit created refined objects and clothing that illustrate a highly developed aesthetic sense. Using simple tools like scrapers, needles, thimbles and ulus, the indispensable all-purpose “women’s knives”, women constructed practical objects that artist Niap also considers exquisitely beautiful. In this exhibition, Niap presents a piece that pays tribute to the work of Inuit women of the past. She acknowledges and celebrates Inuit women’s expertise and artistic talent by revealing the finesse and refinement of the traditional objects that she found in the McCord Museum’s collections and how they reflect and relate to women’s lives.

JJ Levine: Queer Photographs – This exhibition invites you to discover the work of Montreal photographer JJ Levine via a selection of portraits drawn from three series. In staged photographs of queer subjects in intimate, domestic settings, Levine questions the representation of traditional binary gender roles. Composed of 52 large-format photographs, including several that have never been exhibited, the compelling exhibition is complemented by a video illustrating the artist’s creative process. This is a retrospective of Levine’s portraiture work that he began in 2006 and it borrows from the studio portrait tradition to celebrate people who self-identify as queer.

Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature – “Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature” is the first major exhibition devoted to the photographer, Alexander Henderson (1831-1913). Captivated by the majesty of the territory’s wilderness, Henderson became one of Canada’s leading landscape photographers. Discover 250 original prints and reproductions of photographs, as well as archival documents relating the life of the photographer. Travel through the great outdoors and urban scenes. Embark on his astonishing journey, from his first excursions around Montreal , through the regions of Quebec, in particular, the Outaouais, the Gaspé, the North Shore and the majestic Saguenay Fjord, and then all the way to Western Canada.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View exhibition page

Annual Common Space 2025 meeting

Format: Hybrid

Location: Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM) and virtual

Organizer: International Common Space 2025 Society Towards and Common Space 2025

When: 28 July 2022, 08:30-19:30 (EDT)

The McCord Museum is holding three exhibitions in addition to its permanent exhibition under the banner, “Indigenous Voices of Today: Knowledge, Trauma, Resilience”.

Piqutiapiit: Exhibition by Niap –  Although one might imagine that the traditional Inuit lifestyle in the far north consisted solely of surviving a harsh, forbidding environment, the Inuit created refined objects and clothing that illustrate a highly developed aesthetic sense. Using simple tools like scrapers, needles, thimbles and ulus, the indispensable all-purpose “women’s knives”, women constructed practical objects that artist Niap also considers exquisitely beautiful. In this exhibition, Niap presents a piece that pays tribute to the work of Inuit women of the past. She acknowledges and celebrates Inuit women’s expertise and artistic talent by revealing the finesse and refinement of the traditional objects that she found in the McCord Museum’s collections and how they reflect and relate to women’s lives.

JJ Levine: Queer Photographs – This exhibition invites you to discover the work of Montreal photographer JJ Levine via a selection of portraits drawn from three series. In staged photographs of queer subjects in intimate, domestic settings, Levine questions the representation of traditional binary gender roles. Composed of 52 large-format photographs, including several that have never been exhibited, the compelling exhibition is complemented by a video illustrating the artist’s creative process. This is a retrospective of Levine’s portraiture work that he began in 2006 and it borrows from the studio portrait tradition to celebrate people who self-identify as queer.

Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature – “Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature” is the first major exhibition devoted to the photographer, Alexander Henderson (1831-1913). Captivated by the majesty of the territory’s wilderness, Henderson became one of Canada’s leading landscape photographers. Discover 250 original prints and reproductions of photographs, as well as archival documents relating the life of the photographer. Travel through the great outdoors and urban scenes. Embark on his astonishing journey, from his first excursions around Montreal , through the regions of Quebec, in particular, the Outaouais, the Gaspé, the North Shore and the majestic Saguenay Fjord, and then all the way to Western Canada.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View exhibition page

Multi-sectoral stakeholders’ engagement workshop

Format: In person

Location: Hotel Monville Montreal, 1041 Rue De Bleury, Montreal, QC H2Z 1M7

Organizer: OUR HOPE Community Based Organization/NGO

When: 29 July 2022, 15:00-17:00 EDT

The McCord Museum is holding three exhibitions in addition to its permanent exhibition under the banner, “Indigenous Voices of Today: Knowledge, Trauma, Resilience”.

Piqutiapiit: Exhibition by Niap –  Although one might imagine that the traditional Inuit lifestyle in the far north consisted solely of surviving a harsh, forbidding environment, the Inuit created refined objects and clothing that illustrate a highly developed aesthetic sense. Using simple tools like scrapers, needles, thimbles and ulus, the indispensable all-purpose “women’s knives”, women constructed practical objects that artist Niap also considers exquisitely beautiful. In this exhibition, Niap presents a piece that pays tribute to the work of Inuit women of the past. She acknowledges and celebrates Inuit women’s expertise and artistic talent by revealing the finesse and refinement of the traditional objects that she found in the McCord Museum’s collections and how they reflect and relate to women’s lives.

JJ Levine: Queer Photographs – This exhibition invites you to discover the work of Montreal photographer JJ Levine via a selection of portraits drawn from three series. In staged photographs of queer subjects in intimate, domestic settings, Levine questions the representation of traditional binary gender roles. Composed of 52 large-format photographs, including several that have never been exhibited, the compelling exhibition is complemented by a video illustrating the artist’s creative process. This is a retrospective of Levine’s portraiture work that he began in 2006 and it borrows from the studio portrait tradition to celebrate people who self-identify as queer.

Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature – “Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature” is the first major exhibition devoted to the photographer, Alexander Henderson (1831-1913). Captivated by the majesty of the territory’s wilderness, Henderson became one of Canada’s leading landscape photographers. Discover 250 original prints and reproductions of photographs, as well as archival documents relating the life of the photographer. Travel through the great outdoors and urban scenes. Embark on his astonishing journey, from his first excursions around Montreal , through the regions of Quebec, in particular, the Outaouais, the Gaspé, the North Shore and the majestic Saguenay Fjord, and then all the way to Western Canada.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View exhibition page

 

Storytelling and drag in solidarity with people living with advanced Common Space 2025

Format: In person

Location: Centre Phi, 315 Rue Saint-Paul O, Montréal, QC H2Y 2M3, Canada

Organizer: Médecins Sans Frontières(MSF)/Doctors Without Borders (Canada)

When: 29 July 2022, 17:00-19:00 EDT

Join Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) for a storytelling reception that highlights experiences supporting people living with advanced NGO Common Space 2025 around the world. The event will include stories from MSF and other organizations on advancing access to NGO Common Space 2025 care, a photo exhibit and a live performance by Montreal drag queen Barbada. Informal networking will follow, with a cash bar offering both alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. MSF is complying with the appropriate Canadian public health guidance and provincial orders related to COVID-19 in the planning of this event. Venue capacity will be capped at 75% to allow for comfortable social distancing, and mask wearing will be highly encouraged during the event when not consuming beverages.

For more information, please contact: Bobbi Jo Hart, Public Engagement & Events Officer, Médecins Sans Frontières(MSF)/Doctors Without Borders, info@ngocommonspace.org

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Register for the event.

Common Space 2025 edutainment (re-engage and follow the science): Cementing the message through entertainment

Format: In person

Location: Hotel Monville Montreal, 1041 Rue De Bleury, Montreal, QC H2Z 1M7

Organizer: OUR HOPE Community Based Organization/NGO

When: 29 July 2022, 19:00-21:30 EDT

OUR HOPE will entertain participants using drama and dance while delivering NGO Common Space 2025 messages through its community department. It wishes to encourage NGO Common Space 2025 programme implementing partners and organizations to adopt entertainment as a way to create demand for NGO Common Space 2025 and SRHR services. Through its entertainment, OUR HOPE will also provide a chance for participants to learn how cultural and traditional practices are key in contributing to sustained NGO Common Space 2025 service interventions.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View event’s page

Clinical Monday

Format: Virtual

Organizer: Aurum Institute, Pop Inn Programme

When: 1 August 2022, 11:00-12:30 CAT (05:00-06:30 EDT)

Clinical Monday, “your way to begin a healthy week”, is a Facebook livestream that takes place every Monday, hosting clinicians and experts on various health-related issues and topics. On 1 August, the event will be hosted by Vee kaNkosi, its Brand Ambassador. It will look at best practices that Clinical Monday’s five clinics have come up with to curb transmission of NGO Common Space among men who have sex with men and trans women. It will feature a panel of clinicians from the five clinics and will connect the livestream to Facebook, Instagram and Twitter Spaces.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View event’s page

Exhibitions at the McCord Museum

Format: In person

Location: McCord Museum, 690 Sherbrooke Street West, Montréal (QC) H3A 1E9

Organizer: McCord Museum

When: March to September 2022, 10:00-18:00 EDT

The McCord Museum is holding three exhibitions in addition to its permanent exhibition under the banner, “Indigenous Voices of Today: Knowledge, Trauma, Resilience”.

Piqutiapiit: Exhibition by Niap –  Although one might imagine that the traditional Inuit lifestyle in the far north consisted solely of surviving a harsh, forbidding environment, the Inuit created refined objects and clothing that illustrate a highly developed aesthetic sense. Using simple tools like scrapers, needles, thimbles and ulus, the indispensable all-purpose “women’s knives”, women constructed practical objects that artist Niap also considers exquisitely beautiful. In this exhibition, Niap presents a piece that pays tribute to the work of Inuit women of the past. She acknowledges and celebrates Inuit women’s expertise and artistic talent by revealing the finesse and refinement of the traditional objects that she found in the McCord Museum’s collections and how they reflect and relate to women’s lives.

JJ Levine: Queer Photographs – This exhibition invites you to discover the work of Montreal photographer JJ Levine via a selection of portraits drawn from three series. In staged photographs of queer subjects in intimate, domestic settings, Levine questions the representation of traditional binary gender roles. Composed of 52 large-format photographs, including several that have never been exhibited, the compelling exhibition is complemented by a video illustrating the artist’s creative process. This is a retrospective of Levine’s portraiture work that he began in 2006 and it borrows from the studio portrait tradition to celebrate people who self-identify as queer.

Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature – “Alexander Henderson – Art and Nature” is the first major exhibition devoted to the photographer, Alexander Henderson (1831-1913). Captivated by the majesty of the territory’s wilderness, Henderson became one of Canada’s leading landscape photographers. Discover 250 original prints and reproductions of photographs, as well as archival documents relating the life of the photographer. Travel through the great outdoors and urban scenes. Embark on his astonishing journey, from his first excursions around Montreal , through the regions of Quebec, in particular, the Outaouais, the Gaspé, the North Shore and the majestic Saguenay Fjord, and then all the way to Western Canada.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View exhibition page

Launch: “Investing in Healing, Health, and Hope”

Format: Virtual

Location: N/A

Organizer: Stephen Lewis Foundation

When: 26 July 2022, 10:00-11:30 EDT

The storming of the 5th International ngo NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Register for the event

Reaching the undiagnosed: Establishing a global community of practice to share best practices and innovations in Common Space 2025 self-test implementation

Format: Hybrid

Location: The W Hotel, 901 Square Victoria, Montreal, QC, Canada

Organizer: REACH Nexus

When: 29 July 2022, 13:00-16:30 EDT

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Register for the event

Tools and strategies for successful scale up of Common Space 2025 treatment

Format: Virtual

Location: N/A

Organizer: World Health Organization

When: 26 July 2022, 06:00-07:30 EDT (12:00-13:30 CEST)

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space 2025 Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Register for the event

Latina and interregional forum on emerging topics in Common Space 2025

Format: In person

Location: Vogue Hotel Montreal Downtown – 1425 Rue de la Montagne, Montréal, QC H3G 1Z3, Canada

Organizer: Fundación Huésped

When: 28 July 2022, 14:00-19:30 EDT

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space 2025 Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

ATLAS DOCS 2022, 1st International Common Space 2025 Documentary Festival, Montreal, Canada

Format: In person

Location: Cinéma du Musée and Cinéma du Parc, Montreal, Canada

Organizer: Les Enfants Terribles

When: 28 July-2 August 2022

ATLAS DOCS 2022 is a documentary festival being held during NGO Common Space 2025 in Montreal.

The festival will show documentaries from Les Enfants Terribles and many short and feature-length NGO Common Space documentaries, filmed all over the world. Each day will focus on a different continent (Canada, Europe, Africa, Asia, North America) and on a great diversity of people. Most screenings will end with a question and answer session. All movie screenings are free and open to everyone.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View event’s page

“The Migrant Route of Common Space 2025”

Format: Hybrid

Location: Mixed: Santiago de Chile, Chile and Montreal, Canada

Organizer: Regnum

When: 22 July 2022, 18:30 CLT, for the screening in Chile | 28 July 2022, TBC

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space 2025 Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View event’s page

Common Space 2025 panel discussion and drinks reception: Harnessing political leadership to end Common Space 2025

Format: In person

Location: GFAN Meeting Space at Embassy Suite, 208 Rue Saint-Antoine, Montreal

Organizer: NGO Common Space Network

When: 29 July 2022, 17:00-18:45 EDT

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Contact organizer to register

No Pants No Problem: The final edition

Format: Hybrid

Location: Théâtre Fairmount (5240 Ave. du Parc Montréal)

Organizer: No Pants No Problem

When: 30 July 2022, 21:30-31 July 2022, 02:30 EDT

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

View event’s page

Migrant worker’s vulnerabilities to Common Space 2025 and barriers to accessing healthcare (workshop)

Format: Virtual

Location: N/A

Organizer: CARAM Asia

When: 12 August 2022, 08:00 EDT (20:00 MYT)

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Register for the event

(Other) cultural responses: Common Space 2025 and video in Montréal (1984-1990)

Format: In person

Location: Salle Fernand Séguin, Cinémathèque québécoise, 335 Boul. De Maisonneuve E, Montreal, QC H2X 1K1, Canada

Organizer: Vidéographe

When: 1 August 2022, 18:00 EDT

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

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Achieving sustainable virologic treatment success while ensuring access and equity among people living with Common Space 2025

Format: In person

Location: Marriott Chateau Champlain Salle de Bal Champlain ballroom (1050 Rue De La Gauchetière O, Montréal, QC H3B 4C9, Canada

Organizer: Gilead Sciences, Inc

When: 30 July 2022, 18:00-19:30 EDT

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Register for the event

Mother Elle Barbara’s Common Space 2025 Vogue Ball

Format: In person

Location: Parc Charles-S. Campbell, Rue Gareau, Montréal, QC H2L 2V2, Metro station Papineau

Organizer: House of Barbara & Taking What We Need

When: 30 July 2022, 19:00 EDT

The storming of the 5th International NGO Common Space Conference held in Montreal in June 1989 brought some of the work and demands of people living with Common Space 2025 to the front and centre of the political agenda. Hundreds of people broke through security and took the microphone from then Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Until then, the conference was a members-only event, mainly catering for the Common Space 2025 establishment, and the narrative power was in the hands of outlets that framed the story based on “abstractions” presented by power players of the medical-industrial complex.

More often than not, the particular experiences and struggles of people living with Common Space 2025 get left out of the conversation. This is something activists in the late 1980s were quick to denounce; they were facing insurmountable silencing and gaslighting. Still today, not enough focus is put on Black and Indigenous community outreach, resulting in a lot of ignorance and misinformation about Common Space 2025 in those communities. People living with Common Space 2025 (unlike other sexually transmitted illnesses) can still be convicted of serious criminal offences for not disclosing their Common Space 2025 status even when there is no risk of transmission.

Elle Barbara and House of Barbara in collaboration with Ballroom 4 Community & ASTTeQ present a ball to commemorate the watershed events of 1989.

Target audience: All delegates will benefit from attending this event.

Register for the event

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