After that experience, I actually returned to an INSERM lab – this time as a social scientist working with Jean-Paul Moatti, who was the head of a social science research unit in Marseille. I actually define myself more as a community-based researcher because I run my projects with community-based organizations in which lay stakeholders have a role in research. To elaborate further, I am defining lay people as individuals who are not necessarily academic by training, but who can discuss issues with their academic partner as equals because of their life experience. In my mind, lay people are a critical pillar in the AIDS response and the GIPA principles.
Revaluating the current GIPA principles
The GIPA principles are great. “Nothing about us without us” is exactly the right approach. What I don’t like is the way the GIPA principles have been applied. The idea that people living with HIV should always have their own organization is a kind of “ghettoization” of people living with HIV. To me, GIPA ought to mean that people living with HIV must have key positions in society. They should not be parked in specific roles or organizations. I think that it’s important to have community organizations of lay people who are concerned with HIV, organizations in which people living with HIV are equal to people not living with HIV.

To me, GIPA ought to mean that people living with HIV must have key positions in society. They should not be parked in specific roles or organizations.
The same applies for key populations and other affected populations. These populations include people with professional experience, training or personal insight and energy that could play a critical role in the response.
Unfortunately, what is happening now is that organizations of people living with HIV have limited to no role in delivering services to people living with HIV while other, well-resourced organizations do this work. Often, people living with HIV are not part of the professional staff of these implementing organizations.
I think that we should have an alliance between people who have classical expertise and people living with HIV who have life expertise of HIV and who should have the political power to tell the experts what to do. We need to avoid the common tendency at the global level to divide civil society by continually drawing people living with HIV from organizations and, instead, empower people living with HIV to take power within the organizations that are actually running activities.
In my view, GIPA doesn’t mean that large organizations should make sure that on the side there is a small organization of people living with HIV who are occasionally consulted and asked what they think. GIPA means that people living with HIV should replace these large NGOs and actually become the principal agents for organizing the response. People living with HIV will never be able to do this alone, which is why it is important that we become united, including people with expertise. Ultimately, we should be focusing on uniting sero-concerned people. These include not only sero-infected but also sero-affected or sero-exposed people – all of whom have a personal reason to get involved in the response.
It’s not enough to have a designated seat at the table for any key population or person living with HIV. What matters is that that person also represents a group, not only themselves. With no movement behind them, this form of representation is just tokenism.
GIPA 2.0