|
AHILA has held a number of conferences since 1986.
|
2010:Burkina Faso

|
12th Biennial Congress and
General Assembly of AHILA, Ougadougou, Burkina Faso
Theme: Health Information in Africa: Meeting our goals
|
|
2008: Mozambique

|
11th Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AHILA, Maputo, Mozambique
Theme: Provision of Health Information for Poverty Alleviation in Africa
Executive & General Assembly begin development of 5 year Strategic Plan
|
|
2006: Kenya

|
10th Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AHILA, Mombasa, Kenya
Theme: Millennium Development Goals and health information provision in
Africa
|
|
2004: Malawi

|
9th Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AHILA, Blantyre, Malawi
Theme: Health information and rural based communities
|
|
2002: Mali

|
8th Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AHILA, Bamako, Mali
Theme: The Environment and Health: the Librarian’s role in information
diffusion
|
|
2000: Swaziland

|
7th Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AHILA, Kwaluseni, Swaziland
Theme: Challenges of the New Millennium and the role of health information
disseminators in the fight against HIV/AIDS in Africa
|
|
1998: Zambia

|
6th Biennial Congress and
General Assembly of AHILA, Lusaka, Zambia
Theme: Information for the promotion of Health
|
|
1996: Congo

|
5thBiennial Congress and General Assembly of
AHILA, Brazzaville, Congo
Theme: Interconnection: How to break barriers to information provision
|
|
1994: Uganda

|
4th Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AHILA, Kampala, Uganda
Theme: Information for Health for All by the year 2000
|
|
1991: Zimbabwe
|
3rd Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AHILA, Harare, Zimbabwe
Theme: Micro computer applications in health information
|
|
1988: Congo

|
2nd Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AMLA, Brazzaville, Congo
Theme: WHO-partner in health documentation and information activities in
Africa
|
|
1986: Senegal

|
1st Biennial Congress and General Assembly
of AMLA, Dakar, Senegal
Theme: African Health Science Libraries: myth
or reality?
The Association had by now forty-one
registered members.
|
|