COMMUNITY DISRUPTION AND HIV/AIDS IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AMERICAN UNIVERSITY

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COMMUNITY DISRUPTION AND HIV/AIDS IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
SEPTEMBER 13-14, 2012, AMERICAN UNIVERSITY
Sponsored by: Center on Health, Risk and Society at AU
Co-sponsored by: Center for Latin American and Latino Studies at AU and the District of Columbia
Developmental Center for AIDS Research (DC D-CFAR)
Funded by: National Institutes of Health and American University, College of Arts and Sciences
Agenda
Day 1: Thursday, September 13, 2012
Butler Boardroom, 6th Floor Butler Pavilion
8:30-9:00am
Conference Registration and Continental Breakfast
9:00-9:05am
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University Welcome
Scott A. Bass, PhD: Provost, Professor, Department of Public Administration and Policy,
School of Public Administration, American University
Peter Starr, PhD: Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, Professor, Department of
Literature, American University
9:05-9:25am
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Conference Welcome and Overview
Kim M. Blankenship, PhD: Professor and Chair, Sociology Department, Director, Center
on Health, Risk and Society, American University
Eric Hershberg, PhD: Director, Center for Latin American and Latino Studies, Professor of
Government, American University
Alan Greenberg, MD, MPH: Professor and Chair, Department of Epidemiology and
Biostatistics, The George Washington University, Director, District of Columbia
Developmental Center for AIDS Research (DC D-CFAR)
9:25 -9:50am HIV/AIDS in the District of Columbia: Policy Considerations
Gregory Pappas, MD, PhD: Senior Deputy Director HAHSTA (HIV/AID, Hepatitis, STD, and
TB Administration), District of Columbia Department of Health
9:50-10:00am
COFFEE BREAK
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10:00am-12:00pm
PANEL I: Incarceration/Re-entry Cycle
Moderator: Monica Biradavolu, PhD: Assistant Director, Center on Health, Risk, and Society,
Research Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, American University
Speakers:
• Todd Clear, PhD: Dean, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University
“Coercive Mobility--Theory and Evidence”
• Christopher Wildeman, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Yale University
“Incarceration and Population Health in Wealthy Democracies”
• James C. Thomas, MPH, PhD: Associate Professor of Epidemiology, Gillings School of
Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
“Community Health Effects of Incarceration”
• Maria Khan, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Epidemiology, University of Florida at
Gainesville
“Incarceration-related Social Network Disruption, and How HIV Thrives on it”
Discussants:
Leslie Hinkson, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Georgetown University
Irene Kuo, PhD, MPH: Associate Research Professor, Department of Epidemiology and
Biostatistics, School of Public Health and Health Services, The George Washington University
12:00-1:00pm
LUNCH BREAK
1:00-2:45pm
PANEL II: Deportation
Moderator: Fernanda Trotta Bianchi, PhD: Senior Research Scientist, Department of Psychology,
Columbian College of Arts and Sciences, The George Washington University
Speakers:
• Julia Dickson-Gomez, PhD: Professor, Center for AIDS Intervention Research, Medical
College of Wisconsin
“Left Behind: The Effects of Immigration on Salvadoran Children, Families and
Communities”
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Victoria D. Ojeda, MPH, PhD: Assistant Professor, Division of Global Public Health,
Department of Medicine, University of California at San Diego
“Deportation Experiences of Mexican Drug Users: Implications for U.S.-Based HIV and
Drug Use Research”
•
Luis H. Zayas, PhD: Dean of the School of Social Work and Centennial Professor in
Leadership at The University of Texas at Austin
“From Case to Cause: Protecting Citizen-Children through Practice, Research, and
Advocacy”
Discussants:
Patricia Foxen, PhD: Deputy Director of Research, National Council of La Raza
Jayesh Rathod, JD: Associate Professor of Law, Washington College of Law, American
University
2:45-3:00pm
COFFEE BREAK
3:00 – 5:00pm
Panel III: Neighborhood Change/”Gentrification”
Moderator: Typhanye Penniman Dyer, PhD, MPH: Research Assistant Professor, University of
Florida and University of Maryland, College Park
Speakers:
• Jeffrey “Bart” Bingenheimer, PhD, MPH: Assistant Professor, Department of Prevention
and Community Health, School of Public Health and Health Services, The George
Washington University
“Neighborhood Mortality and Age at First Intercourse among Chicago Adolescents”
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Andrew Deener, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of
Connecticut
“Neighborhood Change and the Reconfiguration of Groups”
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Laura Tach, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Policy Analysis and Management,
Cornell University
“De-Concentrating the Poor: How Public Housing Demolition Influences Health
Environments and Health Behaviors”
Shannon M. Monnat, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of
Nevada, Las Vegas
“Geographic Correlates of HIV Risk Behavior and Utilization of HIV Testing”
Discussants:
Michael DM Bader, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, American University
jimi adams, PhD: Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, American University
•
5:00-5:15pm
Closing and Day Two Preview (Kim M. Blankenship)
Day 2: Friday, September 14, 2012
(Butler Boardroom, 6th Floor Butler Pavilion)
8:30-9:00am
Arrival/Continental Breakfast
9:00-9:15am
Overview of Day 2 (Kim M. Blankenship)
9:15-10:45am
Break, move to concurrent session rooms, as assigned
Incarceration/Re-entry cycle
(Butler Conference Room)
Facilitator: Kim M. Blankenship
Neighborhood
change/”gentrification”
(Mary Graydon Center 200)
Facilitator: Michael DM Bader
Note-taker:
11:00am-11:30am
Regroup and Closing
Note-taker:
Deportation
(Mary Graydon Center 247)
Facilitator: Eric Hershberg
Note-taker:
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