top of page

Black Health Primer:
Cost & Registration

Rates

Individual Rates

Individual (General): $350 per person

Individual student/resident: $150 per person

​

Community-Based Organization Rates

General community-based organizations*: $250 per person

Black, Indigenous and Afri-Indigenous-serving/led community-based organizations**: $150 per person

​

Institutional Rates

Tier 1: $350 per seat for less than 200 seats
Tier 2: $310 per seat for 200 to 499 seats
Tier 3: $275 per seat for 500 seats or more

​​

​

*Community rates have been established for registrants who work or volunteer for a community-based organization with limited professional development funds.

​​

**Community rates have been established for registrants who self-identify as Black, Afri-Indigenous, First Nations, Inuit and/or Métis; or work or volunteer for a Black or Indigenous community-based organization with limited professional development.

Registration

To register as an individual, click here

​

For institutional registration (more than 1 seat) please complete this form. You will receive an invoice to complete payment.

​

For any inquiries, please reach out to us via email at bhp@bhec.ca

Black Letter_Transparent_BHEC Logo.png
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

The Black Health Education Collaborative acknowledges with gratitude the Indigenous and Afri-Indigenous Peoples across Turtle Island who continue to thrive and resist colonial violence while striving for self-determination and decolonial futures. We live, work and play in various territories including the lands of the Huron-Wendat, Haudenosaunee and Mississauga’s of the Credit River; Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota and Dene peoples, the Anishinaabe, and on the homeland of the Red River Métis Nation; Kanien:keha’ka and Mi’kmaq.

 

We remember our ancestors, forcibly displanted African peoples, trafficked into Turtle Island as a result of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and the histories and legacies of colonialism and neo-colonialism which continue to impact African Peoples and the descendants of the Black diaspora across the world.

 

We recognize that racial colonial violence harms Black, Afri-Indigenous and Indigenous Peoples through both common and distinct logics and actions. We recognize our responsibility and obligations as African Peoples to be good guests on these lands. We offer thanks to our elders and communities from whom we learn. May your wisdom inform our actions towards a more just future.

bottom of page