Event Description
You're Invited! Join us for a two-part webinar on Wednesday, April 23rd, from 10:00 AM to 12:30 PM CT and 1:30 PM to 3:30 pm CT as we explore the intersections of Long COVID and disability justice. Presented by Jacqueline E. Luciano and Sarah Kim-Williams, in collaboration with Dr. Jennifer Brier from the University of Illinois Chicago / History Moves and Strategies for High Impact / Long COVID Justice. This event will provide a day of thought-provoking presentations, panel discussions, and community-driven conversations.
This webinar is for the public, including the disabled and chronically ill community, higher education students, staff, faculty, long-haulers seeking understanding and support, healthcare professionals, researchers, mental health professionals, families, caregivers, public health officials, advocates, educators, and policymakers. The event will also be valuable for anyone interested in understanding the long-term impacts of infection and exposure-related chronic conditions, disabilities, and ongoing research.
TIP: Check event time for your time zone.
Part I – 10:00 AM - 12:30 PM CT
Part II – 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM CT
This two-part webinar will provide unique insights into how the intersections of Long COVID and disability justice affect individuals and communities, with a focus on inclusive health research and public history. It’s an opportunity to learn, engage, and connect!
* Schedule subject to change. Click here for Detailed schedule!
Register Now to secure your spot. This webinar is free to attend!
Contact breathing4justice@gmail.com
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This program is made possible in part by grants from Illinois Humanities and the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD).
Emi Kane is the director of Long COVID Justice / Strategies for High Impact. She is a disabled and chronically ill educator, researcher and organizer. Emi spent many years working for a large university and a small foundation on health and migration, reparations and redistributive justice, and how people think and learn. She is also a former National Collective member for INCITE, a feminist of color anti-violence network, a co-founder of Survived and Punished, and a former but forever proud member of the Allied Media Projects board of directors. Above all, she thinks that relationships of trust are the most important political tools we have, and tries to live and work in ways that reflect that belief.
Kaimara Herron is a fourth year PhD student in History at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) and Project Manager for Listening for the Long Haul.
Gabriel (they/elle/she/he) is a Senior Fellow with Long COVID Justice / S4HI. They are a queer and disabled activist from Mexico City who migrated to New York City in the late 90’s. Gabriel holds a Masters degree in Social Work with Community Organizing as a method of practice and a certificate in Social Policy from the Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College, where she is now part time faculty. They are also honored to be a member of the HIV Caucus (aka U.S. People Living with HIV Caucus). Gabriel’s life experience as a person living with HIV, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME/CFS), and other complex chronic conditions, fuels their passion for disability justice and liberatory community work.
Lygia Navarro (she/her) is a multiply-disabled independent journalist and the editorial director of the Disabled Journalists Association. Lygia’s work is focused on covering Latine stories, disability and health, and on telling intimate human stories which elucidate larger societal issues. Lygia has lived with long COVID since January 2021, and is based in Tkaronto (Toronto, Canada).
Chimére L. Sweeney is a retired educator and Long Covid activist, writer, and lecturer. Experiencing racism and discrimination while obtaining medical treatment for Long Covid and drawing from teaching underprivileged students in Baltimore, her mission has always been clear: inspire and empower Black patients to tell their unique stories on the physical, mental, and financial effects of Long Covid. From sharing her testimony with Congress to recently being a featured guest on The Washington Post’s Post Live, Sweeney’s message on aiding Black and disabled Long Covid patients in advocating for equitable health care is both passionate and honest.
As the Director of the Black Long Covid Experience, Chimére is a compassionate, trusted figure in the Long Covid community as she aids Black patients with receiving medical care and hosting virtual social events that are inclusive and accessible, including #TheTealReveal, a virtual prom for disabled Long Covid patients that also provided mutual aid to participants in need. This year, she organized #BLCEBHMSocial: Chronically Committed, a 10-day social media campaign to observe Black History Month for disabled Black people with Long Covid. This effort was supported by Long Covid and ME/CFS patients along with prominent community organizations who focus on both health conditions. The campaign also sponsored Black Long Covid Virtual Bingo, a fundraising event with proceeds that assisted a teen with Long Covid in Charlotte, NC.
Chimére is a graduate of Morgan State University, earning a BA in English/Literature and Language. She is the curator and writer of The Blackest Side of Long Covid and host of The Blackest Side Podcast via Substack. In her spare time, she pet-sits and loves to paint. She lives in upstate New York with her husband, Taurean Sweeney.
Maynard Sasis contracted COVID-19 in April 2020 while working as a Registered Nurse. He is also a Community Narrator for Listening for the Long Haul. Learn about his Long COVID story featured on WTTW:
"The Physical and Mental Toll of Living with Long COVID: ‘I Feel Like We’ve Been Abandoned and Forgotten’"
"5 Years After the Pandemic Began, Many Patients Still Live With the Long-Term Effects of COVID-19"
Jacquie Luciano (she/her) is a Filipina-American who worked as a Regulatory Nurse Consultant during the start of the pandemic until she was disabled by Long COVID and associated conditions in 2022. She is a Narrative Architect for Listening for the Long Haul and a Long COVID Advisor for the National Organization for Nurses with Disabilities. In her role as a BIPOC Fellow with Long COVID Justice, she authored an apology letter to her mother—an open-hearted poem about systemic neglect and the pursuit of justice for the Long COVID and ME/CFS communities. Read more from The Sick Times + Disability Visibility Project: Color of Long COVID Series.
Sarah Kim-Williams is a PhD student in Disability Studies with a concentration in Gender and Women’s Studies at University of Illinois Chicago. Her research focuses on disability and kinship in Asian American literature. As a little person, she is a staunch advocate for dwarf pride.
Jennifer Brier is professor of Gender and Women's Studies and History at University of Illinois Chicago. She is the Project Lead for “Listening for the Long Haul, a living history of Long COVID.” Brier is the author of Infectious Ideas: U.S. Political Response to the AIDS Crisis (UNC, 2009). She has curated numerous historical exhibitions, including Out in Chicago for the Chicago History Museum, "Surviving and Thriving: AIDS, Politics and Culture," a traveling exhibition for the National Library of Medicine, and "I'm Still Surviving," www.stillsurviving.net, a transmedia living women's history of HIV/AIDS.
Morgan Leigh Davies is a writer living in Brooklyn whose work has appeared in a wide range of publications including The Sick Times, Electric Lit, Jezebel, and The Los Angeles Review of Books. She has lived with long covid since 2022 and complex chronic illness since 2011. In addition to advocating for those with long covid, she volunteers as a mentor to young writers through Girls Write Now.
Dr. Iliana Pagán-Teiteblaum is a Puerto Rican educator, writer, filmmaker, and artist. She is an Associate Professor of Languages and Cultures at West Chester University of Pennsylvania. She has a BA from the University of Puerto Rico and a PhD from Harvard University. Her research focuses on media and equity in Latin America. Her short film Mulberry Tree (2025) honors the healing relationship between a sick migrant Latinx woman and a 100-year-old tree.