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Wikipedia

Non-binary gender

Non-binary[a] and genderqueer are umbrella terms for gender identities that are not solely male or female (identities outside the gender binary).[2][3] Non-binary identities fall under the transgender umbrella, since non-binary people typically identify with a gender that is different from their sex,[3] though some non-binary people do not consider themselves transgender.[4][5]

Non-binary
A genderqueer pride flag in Valencia reading "The future is not binary" in Spanish
ClassificationGender identity
Abbreviations
  • Enby
  • NB
Other terms
SynonymsGenderqueer
Associated terms

Non-binary people may identify as an intermediate or separate third gender,[6] identify with more than one gender,[7][8] no gender, or have a fluctuating gender identity.[9] Gender identity is separate from sexual or romantic orientation:[10] non-binary people have various sexual orientations.[11] Being non-binary is also not the same as being intersex; most intersex people identify as either male or female.[12]

Non-binary people as a group vary in their gender expressions, and some may reject gender identity altogether.[13] Some non-binary people are medically treated for gender dysphoria with surgery or hormones, as trans men and trans women often are.[14]

Terms, definitions, and identities

 
A non-binary pride flag at a parade in Paris reading "Mon genre est non-binaire" ("My gender is non-binary")

The term genderqueer originated in queer zines of the 1980s as a precursor to the term non-binary.[15] It gained wider use in the 1990s among political activists,[16] especially Riki Anne Wilchins.[17] Wilchins used the term in a 1995 essay published in the first issue of In Your Face to describe anyone who is gender nonconforming, and identified as genderqueer in their 1997 autobiography.[18][19] Wilchins was also one of the main contributors to the anthology Genderqueer: Voices Beyond the Sexual Binary published in 2002.[20] The internet allowed the term genderqueer to spread even further than zines, and by the 2010s the term was introduced to the mainstream via celebrities who publicly identified under the genderqueer umbrella.[16]

People who challenge binary social constructions of gender often self-identify as genderqueer.[21][page needed] In addition to being an umbrella term for non-binary gender identities, genderqueer has been used as an adjective to refer to people who are perceived to transcend or diverge from traditional distinctions of gender, regardless of their gender identity. People may express gender non-normatively by not conforming into the binary gender categories of "man" and "woman".[22]

The term genderqueer has also been applied by those describing what they see as gender ambiguity.[23][page needed] Androgynous (also androgyne) is frequently used as a descriptive term for people in this category. This is because the term androgyny is closely associated with a blend of socially defined masculine and feminine traits.[24][page needed] Not all genderqueer people identify as androgynous; some identify as a masculine woman or a feminine man, or combine genderqueer with another gender option.[25] Some people use enby (from the letters NB) as a short form of non-binary.[26][27] Being non-binary is not the same as being intersex, and most intersex people identify as either male or female.[12]

Many references use the term transgender to include genderqueer/non-binary people.[13][28][29] This use of the word as a broad term for various kinds of gender variation dates to at least 1992 and the publication of Leslie Feinberg's Transgender Liberation: A Movement Whose Time Has Come.[16] In 1994, non-binary author Kate Bornstein wrote, "All the categories of transgender find a common ground in that they each break one or more of the rules of gender: What we have in common is that we are gender outlaws, every one of us."[30] The Human Rights Campaign Foundation and Gender Spectrum use the term gender-expansive to convey "a wider, more flexible range of gender identity and/or expression than typically associated with the binary gender system".[31]

Agender people ("a-" meaning "without"), also called genderless, gender-free, non-gendered, or ungendered,[32][33] are those who identify as having no gender or gender identity.[34][35][13] This category includes a broad range of identities that do not conform to traditional gender norms, but scholar Finn Enke has said that people who identify with any of these positions may not necessarily self-identify as transgender.[36] Agender people have no specific set of pronouns; singular they is typically used, but it is not the default.[37] Neutrois and agender were two of 50 available custom genders added to Facebook in February 2014.[38] Agender has also been a gender option on OkCupid since November 2014.[39]

Bigender (also bi-gender or dual gender) people have two gender identities and behaviors. Identifying as bigender is typically understood to mean that one identifies as both male and female or moves between masculine gender expression and feminine gender expression, having two distinct gender identities simultaneously or fluctuating between them.[40][41][42] This is different from identifying as genderfluid, as those who identify as genderfluid may not go back and forth between any fixed gender identities and may experience an entire range or spectrum of identities over time.[43][44] The American Psychological Association calls bigender identity part of the umbrella of transgender identities.[45] Some bigender people express two distinct personas, which may be feminine, masculine, agender, androgyne, or other gender identities; others find that they identify as two genders simultaneously. A 1999 survey conducted by the San Francisco Department of Public Health observed that, among the transgender community, 3% of those who were assigned male at birth and 8% of those assigned female at birth identified as either "a transvestite, cross-dresser, drag queen, or a bigendered person".[46] A 2016 Harris poll conducted on behalf of GLAAD found that 1% of millennials identify as bigender.[47][48] Trigender people shift among male, female, and third gender.[49]

Demigender people identify partially or mostly with one gender and at the same time with another gender.[50][51] There are several subcategories of the identity. A demi-boy or demi-man, for example, identifies at least partially with being a boy or a man (no matter the sex and gender they were assigned at birth) and partly with other genders or with no other gender (agender). A demiflux person feels that the stable part of their identity is non-binary.[51]

Pangender (also polygender or omnigender) people have multiple gender identities.[52] Some may identify as all genders simultaneously.[53]

Genderfluid people often express a desire to remain flexible about their gender identity rather than committing to a single definition.[54] They may fluctuate among differing gender expressions over their lifetime, or express multiple aspects of various gender markers at the same time.[54][55] A genderfluid person may also identify as bigender, trigender, or pangender.[7][8]

Transfeminine is a term for any person, binary or non-binary, who was assigned male at birth and has a predominantly feminine gender identity or presentation; transmasculine is the equivalent term for someone who was assigned female at birth and has a predominantly masculine gender identity or presentation.[56]

In a 1990 Indigenous LGBT gathering in Winnipeg, the term two-spirit, which refers to third-gender or gender-variant people from Indigenous North American communities, was created "to distinguish and distance Native American/First Nations people from non-Native peoples".[57]

Xenogender is an umbrella term for gender identities that are described with terms outside standard human understandings of gender. These gender identities are typically defined metaphorically in relation to animals, plants, things or sensory characteristics rather than male or female.[58][59]

History

 
Drag queen and musician Shea Couleé identifies as gay and non-binary, using "they/them" pronouns offstage[60][61]
 
Judith Butler, American philosopher, published Gender Trouble in 1990 and publicly declared themself non-binary in 2019[62]

Non-binary gender has been included within the third gender concept, but the history of identities now classified as third gender extends beyond that of nonbinary gender in particular.[63]

In 1776, the Public Universal Friend identified as a genderless evangelist, and afterward shunned both birth name and gendered pronouns,[64][65] an early American instance of public non-binary gender expression.[66]

In 1781, Jens Andersson of Norway, assigned female at birth but identifying as male, was imprisoned and put on trial after marrying Anne Kristine Mortensdotter in a Lutheran church. When asked about his gender, the response was "Hand troer at kunde henhøre til begge Deele" ("He believes he belongs to both").[67]

In 1990, the American gender theorist and philosopher Judith Butler published their book Gender Trouble, questioning both the naturalness and the exclusive dichotomy of the male/female binary. Gender Trouble concludes by arguing that expanding cultural understandings of sex and gender contradicts the idea of sex and gender as binaries and reveals these binaries as unnatural.[68] Butler has publicly identified as non-binary since 2019.[69][62] They use they/them and she/her pronouns, but prefer the former.[70]

In the mid-1990s, the term "gender queer" emerged in connection with the American transgender rights activist Riki Wilchins, who in 2002 co-edited a collection of articles, GenderQueer: Voices from beyond the Sexual Binary.[71] Wilchins used the expression as early as 1995 in the In Your Face newsletter to argue against gender discrimination.[72] In 1997, Wilchins announced they identify as genderqueer in their autobiography.[73] In 2017, they published a collection of articles titled Burn the Binary![74]

In 1997, autism-rights movement activist Jim Sinclair, one of the founders of Autism Network International (ANI), publicly declared themself gender-neutral, writing, "I remain openly and proudly neuter, both physically and socially" in their 1997 self-introduction to the Intersex Society of North America.[75]

In Japan, the expression "X-gender" (x-jendā) has been used since the late 1990s as a definition of gender outside of the binary of male and female.[76] Notable people identifying as X-gender include manga artists Yūki Kamatani and Yuu Watase.[77]

In 2012, the Intersex & Genderqueer Recognition Project began to advocate for expanding gender options on official documentation.[78][failed verification] In 2016, Elisa Rae Shupe was the first person to have a non-binary gender on official U.S. documents.[79]

In 2015, legislator Estefan Cortes-Vargas came out as non-binary in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta during a debate over the inclusion of transgender rights in the provincial human rights code.[80]

Pronouns and titles

 
Pronoun pin badges from a 2016 art and tech festival

Some non-binary or genderqueer people use gender-neutral pronouns. In English, usage of singular "they", "their" and "them" is the most common;[81][82] nonstandard pronouns—commonly called neopronouns[83]—such as xe, ze, sie, co, and ey are sometimes used as well. Some others use the conventional gender-specific pronouns "he" or "she", alternate between "he" and "she", or use only their name and no pronouns at all.[84] Many use additional neutral language, such as the title Mx.[85][86]

A 2015 National Center for Transgender Equality study surveyed nearly 28,000 transgender people in the United States, 35% of whom identified as non-binary or genderqueer. 84% of respondents reported using pronouns that did not match the gender given on their birth certificates. 37% of respondents preferred he/him, 37% preferred she/her, and 29% preferred they/them. 20% of respondents did not ask others to use certain pronouns to refer to them, and 4% used pronouns not given in the survey choices.[87]

The 2023 Gender Census, an annual survey of people "whose genders are not adequately described, expressed or encompassed by the restrictive gender binary," found that 63.1% of respondents said the word "nonbinary" best described how they thought of themselves in English.[88]

Legal recognition

Many non-binary/genderqueer people use the gender they were given at birth to conduct everyday business, as many institutions and forms of identification—such as passports and driver's licenses—only accept, in the sense of recorded recognition, binary gender identities. But with the increasing acceptance of non-binary gender identities and the rise in wider societal recognition, this is slowly changing, as more governments and institutions recognize and allow non-binary identities.[2]

Multiple countries legally recognize non-binary or third gender classifications. Some non-Western societies have long recognized transgender people as a third gender, though this may not (or may only recently)[89] include formal legal recognition. In Western societies, Australia may have been the first country to legally recognize a classification of sex outside of "male" and "female" on legal documentation, with the recognition of Alex MacFarlane's intersex status in 2003.[90] The wider legal recognition of non-binary people—following the recognition of intersex people in 2003—in Australian law followed between 2010 and 2014, with legal action taken against the New South Wales Government Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages by transgender activist Norrie May-Welby to recognize Norrie's legal gender identity as "non-specific". India's Supreme Court formally recognized transgender and non-binary people as a distinct third gender in 2014, following legal action taken by transgender activist Laxmi Narayan Tripathi.[91] In July 2021, Argentina incorporated non-binary gender in its national ID card, becoming the first country in South America to legally recognize non-binary gender on all official documentation; non-binary people in the country will have the option to renew their ID with the letter "X" under gender.[92][93]

While the United States does not federally recognize a non-binary gender, in 2016 Oregon became the first state to recognize a non-binary gender identity.[94] In 2017, California passed an act allowing citizens to identify as "non-binary" on official documents.[94] As of 2019, eight states have passed acts that allow "non-binary" or "X" designations on certain identifying documents.[94] One of the main arguments against the inclusion of a third gender identifier in the U.S. is that it would make law enforcement and surveillance harder, but countries that have officially recognized a third gender marker have not reported these issues.[94] In the U.S. there are no explicit laws to protect non-binary people from discrimination, but under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it is illegal for an employer to require employees to conform to gender stereotypes,[95] or to fire them merely for being transgender.[96]

Discrimination

Various countries throughout history have criminalized transgender and non-binary gender identities.[97][98]

In the U.S., 13% of respondents to the 2008 National Transgender Discrimination Survey chose "A gender not listed here".[b] The "not listed here" respondents were 9 percentage points more likely to report forgoing healthcare due to fear of discrimination than the general sample (36% compared to 27%). 90 percent reported experiencing anti-trans bias at work, and 43 percent reported having attempted suicide.[99]

The reported discrimination non-binary people face includes disregard, disbelief, condescending interactions, and disrespect.[94] Non-binary people are also often viewed as partaking in a trend and thus deemed insincere or attention-seeking. As an accumulation, erasure is often a significant form of discrimination non-binary people face.[94]

Misgendering, intentional or not, is also a problem that many face. In the case of intentional misgendering, transphobia is a driving force. Additionally, the use of they/them pronouns is lumped into[clarification needed] the larger, controversial, subject of safe spaces and political correctness,[100] causing pushback and intentional misgendering by some people.[101]

Non-binary and transgender identifying people also face discrimination in sports participation. Non-binary identifying athletes have an immediate barrier as most sports competitions are divided into men's and women's categories.[102]

Healthcare

Nonbinary people may report significantly less well-being and overall health than binary transgender people, though current research demonstrates conflicting perspectives on this topic.[103] These health disparities may be exacerbated by minority stress by breaking gender and social norms.[104][105]

Healthcare professionals are often uninformed about nonbinary people's specific health needs, sometimes requiring nonbinary patients to educate them.[106] Some providers may believe that nonbinary people do not require transition-related treatment,[107] while others may not understand the difference between their identity and the identities of binary transgender patients.[108] Nonbinary patients report lower rates of respect from healthcare providers than binary transgender people.[109]

Transgender health care

Some nonbinary people desire gender-affirming health care, including hormone replacement therapy or surgery.[110] Others do not,[111] and the ratio of those who desire care to those who do not is unclear. The factors that lead to this decision are complex and unique to each person.[112]

Nonbinary patients seeking gender-affirming care typically begin treatment earlier than binary transgender patients.[113]

Mental health care

Nonbinary people are likely to face more mental stress than binary transgender individuals.[87][114]

Symbols and observances

 
Anjali Gopalan and Gopi Shankar Madurai inaugurating Asia's first Genderqueer Pride Parade at Madurai with a rainbow and genderqueer flag[115][116]

Many flags have been used in non-binary and genderqueer communities to represent various identities. There are distinct non-binary and genderqueer pride flags. The genderqueer pride flag was designed in 2011 by Marilyn Roxie. Lavender represents androgyny or queerness, white represents agender identity, and green represents those whose identities which are defined outside the binary.[117][118][119] The non-binary pride flag was created in 2014 by Kye Rowan.[120] Yellow represents people whose gender exists outside the binary, purple represents those whose gender is a mixture of—or between—male and female, black represents people who have no gender, and white represents those who embrace many or all genders.[121]

Genderfluid people, who fall under the genderqueer umbrella, also have their own flag. Pink represents femininity, white represents lack of gender, purple represents mixed gender or androgyny, black represents all other genders, and blue represents masculinity.[118][122]

Agender people, who also sometimes identify as genderqueer, have their own flag. This flag uses black and white stripes to represent an absence of gender, and a green stripe to represent non-binary genders.[123]

International Non-Binary People's Day is celebrated on July 14.[124][125][126][127] Other observances with non-binary participation include International Transgender Day of Visibility, observed on March 31,[128][129] and International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia, observed on May 17.[130]

Population figures

Argentina

On July 20, 2021, President Alberto Fernández signed Decreto 476/2021, mandating that the National Registry of Persons (RENAPER) allow a third gender option on all national identity cards and passports, marked as "X". The measure also applies to non-citizen permanent residents who possess Argentine identity cards.[133] The 2022 national census, carried out less than a year after the resolution was implemented, counted 8,293 (roughly 0.12%) of the country's population identifying with the "X / other" gender marker.[134]

Brazil

A 2021 survey published in Scientific Reports concluded that 1.19% of Brazilian adults are non-binary, but the study did not ask whether they self-identified as non-binary. Because the authors considered most Brazilians unfamiliar with North American gender terminology, more open-ended questions about gender were asked.[135][136]

Canada

In April 2022, Statistics Canada released findings from the 2021 census, making Canada the first country to ask a core question about gender identity, and found that 41,355 Canadians aged 15 and over identified as nonbinary.[137]

A 2019 survey of the two-spirit and LGBTQ+ population in Hamilton, Ontario, called Mapping the Void: Two-Spirit and LGBTQ+ Experiences in Hamilton showed that 19% of the 906 respondents identified as non-binary.[138]

A 2017 survey of Canadian LGBT+ people called LGBT+ Realities Survey found that 4% of the 1,897 respondents identified as non-binary transgender and 1% identified as non-binary outside of the transgender umbrella.[139]

Switzerland

A 2021 survey found that 0.4% of adults in Switzerland describe themselves as non-binary.[140] The survey of 2,690 Swiss residents was weighted to be reflective of the entire population.[141]

United Kingdom

According to the 2021 United Kingdom census, 0.06% of the population in England and Wales identified as non-binary.[142] The proportion was highest among people aged 16 to 24 years (0.26% or 17,000).[143]

United States

According to a 2021 study by the Williams Institute, an estimated 1.2 million American adults aged between 18 and 60 identify as non-binary, making up 11% of the LGBTQ population in that age bracket.[144]

A 2020 survey by The Trevor Project found that 26% of LGBTQ youth (ages 13–24) in the U.S. identify as non-binary.[5][145]

According to The Report of the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey, 35% of the nearly 28,000 transgender respondents to the anonymous online survey identified as non-binary.[146][147]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Also spelled nonbinary. The term enby, from the abbreviation NB, is also used.[1]
  2. ^ Q3 asked "What is your primary gender identity today?". Possible answers were male, female, "part time as one gender, part time as another", and "a gender not listed here, please specify".

References

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Further reading

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of non-binary at Wiktionary
  •   Quotations related to Non-binary gender at Wikiquote

binary, gender, genderqueer, redirects, here, book, gender, queer, template, infobox, gender, sexual, identity, being, considered, deletion, binary, genderqueer, umbrella, terms, gender, identities, that, solely, male, female, identities, outside, gender, bina. Genderqueer redirects here For the book see Gender Queer The template Infobox gender and sexual identity is being considered for deletion Non binary a and genderqueer are umbrella terms for gender identities that are not solely male or female identities outside the gender binary 2 3 Non binary identities fall under the transgender umbrella since non binary people typically identify with a gender that is different from their sex 3 though some non binary people do not consider themselves transgender 4 5 Non binaryA genderqueer pride flag in Valencia reading The future is not binary in SpanishClassificationGender identityAbbreviationsEnbyNBOther termsSynonymsGenderqueerAssociated termsAndrogynyqueerthird gendertransgendergenderfluidtwo spiritNon binary people may identify as an intermediate or separate third gender 6 identify with more than one gender 7 8 no gender or have a fluctuating gender identity 9 Gender identity is separate from sexual or romantic orientation 10 non binary people have various sexual orientations 11 Being non binary is also not the same as being intersex most intersex people identify as either male or female 12 Non binary people as a group vary in their gender expressions and some may reject gender identity altogether 13 Some non binary people are medically treated for gender dysphoria with surgery or hormones as trans men and trans women often are 14 Contents 1 Terms definitions and identities 2 History 3 Pronouns and titles 4 Legal recognition 5 Discrimination 6 Healthcare 6 1 Transgender health care 6 2 Mental health care 7 Symbols and observances 8 Population figures 8 1 Argentina 8 2 Brazil 8 3 Canada 8 4 Switzerland 8 5 United Kingdom 8 6 United States 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksTerms definitions and identities nbsp A non binary pride flag at a parade in Paris reading Mon genre est non binaire My gender is non binary The term genderqueer originated in queer zines of the 1980s as a precursor to the term non binary 15 It gained wider use in the 1990s among political activists 16 especially Riki Anne Wilchins 17 Wilchins used the term in a 1995 essay published in the first issue of In Your Face to describe anyone who is gender nonconforming and identified as genderqueer in their 1997 autobiography 18 19 Wilchins was also one of the main contributors to the anthology Genderqueer Voices Beyond the Sexual Binary published in 2002 20 The internet allowed the term genderqueer to spread even further than zines and by the 2010s the term was introduced to the mainstream via celebrities who publicly identified under the genderqueer umbrella 16 People who challenge binary social constructions of gender often self identify as genderqueer 21 page needed In addition to being an umbrella term for non binary gender identities genderqueer has been used as an adjective to refer to people who are perceived to transcend or diverge from traditional distinctions of gender regardless of their gender identity People may express gender non normatively by not conforming into the binary gender categories of man and woman 22 The term genderqueer has also been applied by those describing what they see as gender ambiguity 23 page needed Androgynous also androgyne is frequently used as a descriptive term for people in this category This is because the term androgyny is closely associated with a blend of socially defined masculine and feminine traits 24 page needed Not all genderqueer people identify as androgynous some identify as a masculine woman or a feminine man or combine genderqueer with another gender option 25 Some people use enby from the letters NB as a short form of non binary 26 27 Being non binary is not the same as being intersex and most intersex people identify as either male or female 12 Many references use the term transgender to include genderqueer non binary people 13 28 29 This use of the word as a broad term for various kinds of gender variation dates to at least 1992 and the publication of Leslie Feinberg s Transgender Liberation A Movement Whose Time Has Come 16 In 1994 non binary author Kate Bornstein wrote All the categories of transgender find a common ground in that they each break one or more of the rules of gender What we have in common is that we are gender outlaws every one of us 30 The Human Rights Campaign Foundation and Gender Spectrum use the term gender expansive to convey a wider more flexible range of gender identity and or expression than typically associated with the binary gender system 31 Agender people a meaning without also called genderless gender free non gendered or ungendered 32 33 are those who identify as having no gender or gender identity 34 35 13 This category includes a broad range of identities that do not conform to traditional gender norms but scholar Finn Enke has said that people who identify with any of these positions may not necessarily self identify as transgender 36 Agender people have no specific set of pronouns singular they is typically used but it is not the default 37 Neutrois and agender were two of 50 available custom genders added to Facebook in February 2014 38 Agender has also been a gender option on OkCupid since November 2014 39 Bigender redirects here For the sexual attraction to more than one gender see Bisexual Bigender also bi gender or dual gender people have two gender identities and behaviors Identifying as bigender is typically understood to mean that one identifies as both male and female or moves between masculine gender expression and feminine gender expression having two distinct gender identities simultaneously or fluctuating between them 40 41 42 This is different from identifying as genderfluid as those who identify as genderfluid may not go back and forth between any fixed gender identities and may experience an entire range or spectrum of identities over time 43 44 The American Psychological Association calls bigender identity part of the umbrella of transgender identities 45 Some bigender people express two distinct personas which may be feminine masculine agender androgyne or other gender identities others find that they identify as two genders simultaneously A 1999 survey conducted by the San Francisco Department of Public Health observed that among the transgender community 3 of those who were assigned male at birth and 8 of those assigned female at birth identified as either a transvestite cross dresser drag queen or a bigendered person 46 A 2016 Harris poll conducted on behalf of GLAAD found that 1 of millennials identify as bigender 47 48 Trigender people shift among male female and third gender 49 Demigender people identify partially or mostly with one gender and at the same time with another gender 50 51 There are several subcategories of the identity A demi boy or demi man for example identifies at least partially with being a boy or a man no matter the sex and gender they were assigned at birth and partly with other genders or with no other gender agender A demiflux person feels that the stable part of their identity is non binary 51 Pangender also polygender or omnigender people have multiple gender identities 52 Some may identify as all genders simultaneously 53 Genderfluid people often express a desire to remain flexible about their gender identity rather than committing to a single definition 54 They may fluctuate among differing gender expressions over their lifetime or express multiple aspects of various gender markers at the same time 54 55 A genderfluid person may also identify as bigender trigender or pangender 7 8 Transfeminine is a term for any person binary or non binary who was assigned male at birth and has a predominantly feminine gender identity or presentation transmasculine is the equivalent term for someone who was assigned female at birth and has a predominantly masculine gender identity or presentation 56 In a 1990 Indigenous LGBT gathering in Winnipeg the term two spirit which refers to third gender or gender variant people from Indigenous North American communities was created to distinguish and distance Native American First Nations people from non Native peoples 57 Xenogender is an umbrella term for gender identities that are described with terms outside standard human understandings of gender These gender identities are typically defined metaphorically in relation to animals plants things or sensory characteristics rather than male or female 58 59 HistoryFurther information Third gender History and Transgender history nbsp Drag queen and musician Shea Coulee identifies as gay and non binary using they them pronouns offstage 60 61 nbsp Judith Butler American philosopher published Gender Trouble in 1990 and publicly declared themself non binary in 2019 62 Non binary gender has been included within the third gender concept but the history of identities now classified as third gender extends beyond that of nonbinary gender in particular 63 In 1776 the Public Universal Friend identified as a genderless evangelist and afterward shunned both birth name and gendered pronouns 64 65 an early American instance of public non binary gender expression 66 In 1781 Jens Andersson of Norway assigned female at birth but identifying as male was imprisoned and put on trial after marrying Anne Kristine Mortensdotter in a Lutheran church When asked about his gender the response was Hand troer at kunde henhore til begge Deele He believes he belongs to both 67 In 1990 the American gender theorist and philosopher Judith Butler published their book Gender Trouble questioning both the naturalness and the exclusive dichotomy of the male female binary Gender Trouble concludes by arguing that expanding cultural understandings of sex and gender contradicts the idea of sex and gender as binaries and reveals these binaries as unnatural 68 Butler has publicly identified as non binary since 2019 69 62 They use they them and she her pronouns but prefer the former 70 In the mid 1990s the term gender queer emerged in connection with the American transgender rights activist Riki Wilchins who in 2002 co edited a collection of articles GenderQueer Voices from beyond the Sexual Binary 71 Wilchins used the expression as early as 1995 in the In Your Face newsletter to argue against gender discrimination 72 In 1997 Wilchins announced they identify as genderqueer in their autobiography 73 In 2017 they published a collection of articles titled Burn the Binary 74 In 1997 autism rights movement activist Jim Sinclair one of the founders of Autism Network International ANI publicly declared themself gender neutral writing I remain openly and proudly neuter both physically and socially in their 1997 self introduction to the Intersex Society of North America 75 In Japan the expression X gender x jenda has been used since the late 1990s as a definition of gender outside of the binary of male and female 76 Notable people identifying as X gender include manga artists Yuki Kamatani and Yuu Watase 77 In 2012 the Intersex amp Genderqueer Recognition Project began to advocate for expanding gender options on official documentation 78 failed verification In 2016 Elisa Rae Shupe was the first person to have a non binary gender on official U S documents 79 In 2015 legislator Estefan Cortes Vargas came out as non binary in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta during a debate over the inclusion of transgender rights in the provincial human rights code 80 Pronouns and titlesMain articles Gender neutrality in languages with gendered third person pronouns and Gender neutral language nbsp Pronoun pin badges from a 2016 art and tech festivalSome non binary or genderqueer people use gender neutral pronouns In English usage of singular they their and them is the most common 81 82 nonstandard pronouns commonly called neopronouns 83 such as xe ze sie co and ey are sometimes used as well Some others use the conventional gender specific pronouns he or she alternate between he and she or use only their name and no pronouns at all 84 Many use additional neutral language such as the title Mx 85 86 A 2015 National Center for Transgender Equality study surveyed nearly 28 000 transgender people in the United States 35 of whom identified as non binary or genderqueer 84 of respondents reported using pronouns that did not match the gender given on their birth certificates 37 of respondents preferred he him 37 preferred she her and 29 preferred they them 20 of respondents did not ask others to use certain pronouns to refer to them and 4 used pronouns not given in the survey choices 87 The 2023 Gender Census an annual survey of people whose genders are not adequately described expressed or encompassed by the restrictive gender binary found that 63 1 of respondents said the word nonbinary best described how they thought of themselves in English 88 Legal recognitionMain article Legal recognition of non binary gender Many non binary genderqueer people use the gender they were given at birth to conduct everyday business as many institutions and forms of identification such as passports and driver s licenses only accept in the sense of recorded recognition binary gender identities But with the increasing acceptance of non binary gender identities and the rise in wider societal recognition this is slowly changing as more governments and institutions recognize and allow non binary identities 2 Multiple countries legally recognize non binary or third gender classifications Some non Western societies have long recognized transgender people as a third gender though this may not or may only recently 89 include formal legal recognition In Western societies Australia may have been the first country to legally recognize a classification of sex outside of male and female on legal documentation with the recognition of Alex MacFarlane s intersex status in 2003 90 The wider legal recognition of non binary people following the recognition of intersex people in 2003 in Australian law followed between 2010 and 2014 with legal action taken against the New South Wales Government Registry of Births Deaths and Marriages by transgender activist Norrie May Welby to recognize Norrie s legal gender identity as non specific India s Supreme Court formally recognized transgender and non binary people as a distinct third gender in 2014 following legal action taken by transgender activist Laxmi Narayan Tripathi 91 In July 2021 Argentina incorporated non binary gender in its national ID card becoming the first country in South America to legally recognize non binary gender on all official documentation non binary people in the country will have the option to renew their ID with the letter X under gender 92 93 While the United States does not federally recognize a non binary gender in 2016 Oregon became the first state to recognize a non binary gender identity 94 In 2017 California passed an act allowing citizens to identify as non binary on official documents 94 As of 2019 update eight states have passed acts that allow non binary or X designations on certain identifying documents 94 One of the main arguments against the inclusion of a third gender identifier in the U S is that it would make law enforcement and surveillance harder but countries that have officially recognized a third gender marker have not reported these issues 94 In the U S there are no explicit laws to protect non binary people from discrimination but under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 it is illegal for an employer to require employees to conform to gender stereotypes 95 or to fire them merely for being transgender 96 DiscriminationMain article Discrimination against non binary people Various countries throughout history have criminalized transgender and non binary gender identities 97 98 In the U S 13 of respondents to the 2008 National Transgender Discrimination Survey chose A gender not listed here b The not listed here respondents were 9 percentage points more likely to report forgoing healthcare due to fear of discrimination than the general sample 36 compared to 27 90 percent reported experiencing anti trans bias at work and 43 percent reported having attempted suicide 99 The reported discrimination non binary people face includes disregard disbelief condescending interactions and disrespect 94 Non binary people are also often viewed as partaking in a trend and thus deemed insincere or attention seeking As an accumulation erasure is often a significant form of discrimination non binary people face 94 Misgendering intentional or not is also a problem that many face In the case of intentional misgendering transphobia is a driving force Additionally the use of they them pronouns is lumped into clarification needed the larger controversial subject of safe spaces and political correctness 100 causing pushback and intentional misgendering by some people 101 Non binary and transgender identifying people also face discrimination in sports participation Non binary identifying athletes have an immediate barrier as most sports competitions are divided into men s and women s categories 102 HealthcareNonbinary people may report significantly less well being and overall health than binary transgender people though current research demonstrates conflicting perspectives on this topic 103 These health disparities may be exacerbated by minority stress by breaking gender and social norms 104 105 Healthcare professionals are often uninformed about nonbinary people s specific health needs sometimes requiring nonbinary patients to educate them 106 Some providers may believe that nonbinary people do not require transition related treatment 107 while others may not understand the difference between their identity and the identities of binary transgender patients 108 Nonbinary patients report lower rates of respect from healthcare providers than binary transgender people 109 Transgender health care Some nonbinary people desire gender affirming health care including hormone replacement therapy or surgery 110 Others do not 111 and the ratio of those who desire care to those who do not is unclear The factors that lead to this decision are complex and unique to each person 112 Nonbinary patients seeking gender affirming care typically begin treatment earlier than binary transgender patients 113 Mental health care Nonbinary people are likely to face more mental stress than binary transgender individuals 87 114 Symbols and observancesMain article LGBT symbols nbsp Anjali Gopalan and Gopi Shankar Madurai inaugurating Asia s first Genderqueer Pride Parade at Madurai with a rainbow and genderqueer flag 115 116 Many flags have been used in non binary and genderqueer communities to represent various identities There are distinct non binary and genderqueer pride flags The genderqueer pride flag was designed in 2011 by Marilyn Roxie Lavender represents androgyny or queerness white represents agender identity and green represents those whose identities which are defined outside the binary 117 118 119 The non binary pride flag was created in 2014 by Kye Rowan 120 Yellow represents people whose gender exists outside the binary purple represents those whose gender is a mixture of or between male and female black represents people who have no gender and white represents those who embrace many or all genders 121 Genderfluid people who fall under the genderqueer umbrella also have their own flag Pink represents femininity white represents lack of gender purple represents mixed gender or androgyny black represents all other genders and blue represents masculinity 118 122 Agender people who also sometimes identify as genderqueer have their own flag This flag uses black and white stripes to represent an absence of gender and a green stripe to represent non binary genders 123 International Non Binary People s Day is celebrated on July 14 124 125 126 127 Other observances with non binary participation include International Transgender Day of Visibility observed on March 31 128 129 and International Day Against Homophobia Biphobia and Transphobia observed on May 17 130 nbsp Transgender pride flag in which white represents non binary people 131 132 nbsp Agender pride flag nbsp Bigender pride flag nbsp Genderfluid pride flag nbsp Genderqueer pride flag nbsp Non binary flag nbsp Trigender pride flag nbsp Non binary gender symbol nbsp Agender symbol nbsp Genderfluid symbolPopulation figuresArgentina On July 20 2021 President Alberto Fernandez signed Decreto 476 2021 mandating that the National Registry of Persons RENAPER allow a third gender option on all national identity cards and passports marked as X The measure also applies to non citizen permanent residents who possess Argentine identity cards 133 The 2022 national census carried out less than a year after the resolution was implemented counted 8 293 roughly 0 12 of the country s population identifying with the X other gender marker 134 Brazil A 2021 survey published in Scientific Reports concluded that 1 19 of Brazilian adults are non binary but the study did not ask whether they self identified as non binary Because the authors considered most Brazilians unfamiliar with North American gender terminology more open ended questions about gender were asked 135 136 Canada In April 2022 Statistics Canada released findings from the 2021 census making Canada the first country to ask a core question about gender identity and found that 41 355 Canadians aged 15 and over identified as nonbinary 137 A 2019 survey of the two spirit and LGBTQ population in Hamilton Ontario called Mapping the Void Two Spirit and LGBTQ Experiences in Hamilton showed that 19 of the 906 respondents identified as non binary 138 A 2017 survey of Canadian LGBT people called LGBT Realities Survey found that 4 of the 1 897 respondents identified as non binary transgender and 1 identified as non binary outside of the transgender umbrella 139 Switzerland A 2021 survey found that 0 4 of adults in Switzerland describe themselves as non binary 140 The survey of 2 690 Swiss residents was weighted to be reflective of the entire population 141 United Kingdom According to the 2021 United Kingdom census 0 06 of the population in England and Wales identified as non binary 142 The proportion was highest among people aged 16 to 24 years 0 26 or 17 000 143 United States According to a 2021 study by the Williams Institute an estimated 1 2 million American adults aged between 18 and 60 identify as non binary making up 11 of the LGBTQ population in that age bracket 144 A 2020 survey by The Trevor Project found that 26 of LGBTQ youth ages 13 24 in the U S identify as non binary 5 145 According to The Report of the 2015 U S Transgender Survey 35 of the nearly 28 000 transgender respondents to the anonymous online survey identified as non binary 146 147 See also nbsp LGBT portalGenderqueer fashion Gender neutrality Gender neutral language Gender neutrality in languages with grammatical gender Gender neutrality in genderless languages Gender neutrality in English Gender marking in job titles Gender specific and gender neutral pronouns Gender transitioning Gender variance Include Mx List of fictional non binary characters List of people with non binary gender identities Postgenderism Queer heterosexuality Transcending Boundaries ConferenceExplanatory notes Also spelled nonbinary The term enby from the abbreviation NB is also used 1 Q3 asked What is your primary gender identity today Possible answers were male female part time as one gender part time as another and a gender not listed here please specify References Bergman S Bear Barker Meg John 2017 Non binary Activism In Richards Christina Bouman Walter Pierre Barker Meg John eds Genderqueer and Non Binary Genders Critical and Applied Approaches in Sexuality Gender and Identity Palgrave Macmillan p 43 ISBN 978 1 137 51052 5 a b Richards Christina Bouman Walter Pierre Seal Leighton Barker Meg John Nieder Timo O T Sjoen Guy 2016 Non binary or genderqueer genders International Review of Psychiatry 28 1 95 102 doi 10 3109 09540261 2015 1106446 hdl 1854 LU 7279758 PMID 26753630 S2CID 29985722 Archived from the original on June 26 2019 Retrieved June 9 2019 a b Supporting amp Caring for Transgender Children PDF Human Rights Campaign Archived from the original PDF on July 24 2021 Retrieved April 8 2021 Trans Gender Identity The Trevor Project Archived from the original on July 4 2018 Retrieved October 11 2019 a b Ennis Dawn July 13 2021 New Research Reveals Insights Into America s Nonbinary Youth Forbes Archived from the original on January 6 2022 Retrieved January 6 2022 Beemyn Brett Genny 2008 Genderqueer glbtq An Encyclopedia of Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender and Queer Culture Chicago Illinois glbtq Inc Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved May 3 2012 a b Bosson Jennifer K Vandello Joseph A Buckner Camille E 2018 The Psychology of Sex and Gender Thousand Oaks California Sage Publications p 54 ISBN 978 1 5063 3134 8 OCLC 1038755742 Archived from the original on May 28 2020 Retrieved August 4 2019 via Google Books a b Whyte Stephen Brooks Robert C Torgler Benno September 25 2018 Man Woman Other Factors Associated with Nonbinary Gender Identification Archives of Sexual Behavior Heidelberg Germany Springer Science Business Media 47 8 2397 2406 doi 10 1007 s10508 018 1307 3 PMID 30255409 S2CID 52823167 2 out of 7479 0 03 percent of respondents to the Australian Sex Survey a 2016 online research survey self identified as trigender Winter Claire Ruth 2010 Understanding Transgender Diversity A Sensible Explanation of Sexual and Gender Identities Scotts Valley California CreateSpace ISBN 978 1 4563 1490 3 OCLC 703235508 page needed Transgender Glossary of Terms GLAAD Media Reference Guide Gay amp Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation Archived from the original on May 30 2012 Retrieved May 25 2011 Stryker 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Anne eds 2002 GenderQueer voices from beyond the sexual binary 1st ed New York City Alyson Books ISBN 978 1 55583 730 3 OCLC 50389309 Shaw Susan Lee Janet April 23 2014 Women s voices feminist visions classic and contemporary readings Sixth ed New York pp 130 135 ISBN 978 0 07 802700 0 OCLC 862041473 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dahir Mubarak May 25 1999 Whose Movement Is It The Advocate San Francisco California Here Media p 52 Girshick Lori B 2008 Transgender Voices Beyond Women and Men Hanover New Hampshire University Press of New England ISBN 978 1 58465 645 6 OCLC 183162406 Shaw Susan M Lee Janet 2015 Women s Voices Feminist Visions 6th ed New York City McGraw Hill Education Walsh Reuben December 2010 More T vicar My experiences as a genderqueer person of faith All God s Children Vol 2 no 3 Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement Sheridan Vanessa 2018 Transgender in the Workplace The Complete Guide Bloomsbury Academic p 11 ISBN 978 1440858062 Hope Sam 2019 Person Centred Counselling for Trans and Gender Diverse People London England Jessica Kingsley Publishers p 218 ISBN 978 1784509378 Vargo Marc E November 30 2011 A Review of Please select your gender From the invention of hysteria to the democratizing of transgenderism Journal of GLBT Family Studies 7 5 2 493 doi 10 1080 1550428X 2011 623982 ISSN 1550 4298 S2CID 142815065 up to three million U S citizens regard themselves as transgender a term referring to those whose gender identities are at odds with their biological sex The term is an expansive one however and may apply to other individuals as well from the person whose behavior purposely and dramatically diverges from society s traditional male female roles to the agender bigender or third gender person whose self definition lies outside of the male female binary altogether In short those counted under this term constitute a wide array of people who do not conform to and 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100 ISBN 978 0 8014 5413 4 Samantha Schmidt A genderless prophet drew hundreds of followers long before the age of nonbinary pronouns Archived December 31 2021 at the Wayback Machine January 5 2020 The Washington Post Et besynderligt givtermaal mellem tvende fruentimmer A strange gift term between two women s hours Skeivt arkiv in Norwegian December 16 2014 Archived from the original on July 27 2021 Retrieved September 7 2021 Butler Judith 1990 Gender Trouble Feminism and the Subversion of Identity 1st ed New York Routledge p 149 ISBN 0415900433 Interviews by Kian December 27 2019 Judith Butler on her Philosophy and Current Events Interviews by Kian Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved July 26 2020 Fischer Kathryn July 13 2020 Das Pronomen ist frei vom Korper aber es ist nicht frei vom Geschlecht The Pronoun is free from the Body but it is not free from Gender Der Tagesspiegel in German Retrieved December 24 2021 Welches Pronomen bevorzuge ich Butler lacht Es ist they sagt Butler Wir haben das Jahr 2020 und Butler outet sich als they ein wahrhaft historischer Moment Which pronoun do I prefer Butler laughs It is they Butler says It is the year 2020 and Butler outs theirself as they a truly historic moment Nestle Joan Howell Clare Wilchins Riki Anne eds 2002 GenderQueer voices from beyond the sexual binary First ed Los Angeles ISBN 1 55583 730 1 OCLC 50389309 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wilchins Riki Anne Spring 1995 In Your Face No 1 Spring 1995 Digital Transgender Archive Genderqueer History Tumblr Retrieved November 22 2022 Wilchins Riki 2017 Burn the Binary Selected Writings on the Politics of Trans Genderqueer and Nonbinary Riverdale NY Riverdale Avenue Books ISBN 978 1626014077 Brief Biography February 7 2009 Archived from the original on February 7 2009 Retrieved November 22 2022 Intersections An Introduction to X Jenda Examining a new gender identity in Japan 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Retrieved April 30 2021 Alberto Fernandez pone en marcha el DNI para personas no binarias en un paso mas por la igualdad de genero Alberto Fernandez launches the DNI for non binary people in one more step for gender equality www clarin com in Spanish July 21 2021 Archived from the original on July 27 2021 Retrieved July 26 2021 Westfall Sammy July 22 2021 Argentina rolls out gender neutral ID The Washington Post Archived from the original on October 3 2021 Retrieved July 27 2021 a b c d e f They Them and Theirs harvardlawreview org January 10 2019 Archived from the original on December 5 2019 Retrieved December 9 2019 Cecka Dale Margolin Chamallas Martha 2016 Price Waterhouse v Hopkins 490 U S 228 1989 Feminist Judgments pp 341 360 doi 10 1017 cbo9781316411254 020 ISBN 978 1 107 12662 6 See Price Waterhouse v Hopkins 490 U S 228 250 1989 holding that an employer who punishes employees who fail to conform to stereotypical expectations of members of his or her sex discriminates on the basis of sex a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Liptak Adam June 15 2020 Civil Rights Law Protects Gay and Transgender Workers Supreme Court Rules The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 17 2020 Retrieved March 7 2022 Wareham Jamie New Report Shows Where It s Illegal To Be Transgender In 2020 Forbes Archived from the original on April 30 2021 Retrieved April 30 2021 Trans Legal Mapping Report ILGA September 28 2017 Retrieved July 14 2022 Harrison Jack Grant Jaime Herman Jody L A Gender Not Listed Here Genderqueers Gender Rebels and OtherWise in the National Transgender Discrimination Survey PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 25 2012 Retrieved April 29 2013 Richards Christina Bouman Walter Pierre Barker Meg John 2017 Genderqueer and Non Binary Genders Springer ISBN 978 1 137 51053 2 Archived from the original on March 2 2021 Retrieved October 19 2020 Misgendering California Law Review Archived from the original on December 22 2022 Retrieved November 11 2022 Erikainen Sonja Vincent Ben Hopkins Al October 9 2020 Specific Detriment Barriers and Opportunities for Non Binary Inclusive Sports in Scotland Journal of Sport amp Social Issues 46 1 75 102 doi 10 1177 0193723520962937 S2CID 225167557 Price Feeney Myeshia Green Amy E Dorison Samuel June 2020 Understanding the Mental Health of Transgender and Nonbinary Youth Journal of Adolescent Health 66 6 684 690 doi 10 1016 j jadohealth 2019 11 314 ISSN 1054 139X PMID 31992489 S2CID 210947113 Burgwal Aisa Gvianishvili Natia Hard Vierge Kata Julia Garcia Nieto Isidro Orre Cal Smiley Adam Vidic Jelena Motmans Joz July 3 2019 Health disparities between binary and non binary trans people A community driven survey International Journal of Transgenderism 20 2 3 218 229 doi 10 1080 15532739 2019 1629370 ISSN 1553 2739 PMC 6831016 PMID 32999608 Harrison Jack Grant Jaime Herman Jody L April 1 2012 A Gender Not Listed Here Genderqueers Gender 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Transgenderism 20 2 3 132 137 doi 10 1080 15532739 2018 1534075 ISSN 1553 2739 PMC 6831034 PMID 32999601 Kattari Shanna K Atteberry Ash Brittanie Kinney M Killian Walls N Eugene Kattari Leonardo October 21 2019 One size does not fit all differential transgender health experiences Social Work in Health Care 58 9 899 917 doi 10 1080 00981389 2019 1677279 ISSN 0098 1389 PMID 31618117 S2CID 204757090 Perez Brumer Amaya Day Jack K Russell Stephen T Hatzenbuehler Mark L September 2017 Prevalence and Correlates of Suicidal Ideation Among Transgender Youth in California Findings From a Representative Population Based Sample of High School Students Journal of the American Academy of Child amp Adolescent Psychiatry 56 9 739 746 doi 10 1016 j jaac 2017 06 010 PMC 5695881 PMID 28838578 One Who Fights For an Other The New Indian Express Archived from the original on September 24 2016 Retrieved May 11 2015 Worldwide gay rights as a social movement picks up merinews com Archived from the original on August 2 2017 Retrieved May 12 2017 Deater Lynn April 29 2015 He She or They The Commuter ncccommuter org Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved December 20 2016 a b Flags and Symbols PDF Amherst Massachusetts Amherst College Archived PDF from the original on May 10 2017 Retrieved December 20 2016 Gender and Sexuality Awareness Flags David Mariner October 26 2015 Archived from the original on February 3 2017 Retrieved December 20 2016 8 Things Non Binary People Need to Know Let s Queer Things Up March 15 2015 Archived from the original on December 22 2016 Retrieved December 20 2016 After counting up all the votes for each variation of my nonbinary flag to be separate from the genderqueer flag it seems this is the most loved Yay genderweird Tumblr Archived from the original on June 24 2018 Retrieved June 24 2018 Gender fluid added to the Oxford English Dictionary LGBTQ Nation Archived from the original on October 25 2016 Retrieved December 20 2016 Manzella Samantha 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1038 s41598 021 81411 4 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 7838397 PMID 33500432 Sampaio Jana Cerqueira Sofia de Barros Duda Monteiro June 26 2021 Nem ele nem ela os nao binarios ganham espaco e voz na sociedade VEJA in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved January 28 2023 Easton Rob April 27 2022 Historic census data sheds light on number of trans and non binary people for first time Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved April 28 2022 Mapping the Void Two Spirit and LGBTQ Experiences in Hamilton PDF June 11 2019 Archived PDF from the original on July 3 2019 Retrieved July 19 2019 The values needs and realities of LGBT people in Canada in 2017 2017 Archived from the original on July 27 2019 Retrieved July 27 2019 Only 0 4 of Swiss residents describe themselves as non binary SWI swissinfo ch December 29 2021 Archived from the original on January 6 2022 Retrieved January 6 2022 Geschlechtergerechter Studie 1 Geschlecht und Identitat Gender Equitable Study 1 Gender and Identity PDF in German Sotomo December 2021 p 5 Archived PDF from the original on December 28 2021 Retrieved January 6 2022 Gender identity England and Wales Office for National Statistics Gender identity age and sex England and Wales Office for National Statistics www ons gov uk Retrieved November 4 2023 Wilson Bianca D M Meyer Ilan H June 2021 Nonbinary LGBTQ Adults in the United States Williams Institute Archived from the original on June 24 2021 Retrieved June 25 2021 Diversity of Nonbinary Youth The Trevor Project July 13 2021 Archived from the original on January 6 2022 Retrieved January 6 2022 Cummings William June 21 2017 When asked their sex some are going with option X USA Today Archived from the original on February 4 2019 Retrieved January 30 2019 The Report of the 2015 U S Transgender Survey PDF National Center for Transgender Equality 2016 p 45 Archived PDF from the original on May 9 2018 Retrieved May 30 2019 Further readingBarker Meg John Scheele Julia 2016 Queer A Graphic History London Icon Books ISBN 978 1 78578 071 4 OCLC 939427299 Bernstein Sycamore Mattilda ed 2006 Nobody Passes Rejecting the Rules of Gender and Conformity Emeryville Seal Press ISBN 978 1 58005 184 2 OCLC 50389309 Bornstein Kate Bergman S Bear eds 2010 Gender Outlaws The Next Generation Reprint ed Berkeley Seal Press ISBN 978 1 58005 308 2 OCLC 837948378 Fine Cordelia 2011 Delusions of Gender How Our Minds Society and Neurosexism Create Difference Reprint ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 34024 2 OCLC 449865367 Fineman Martha Albertson 2013 Feminism masculinities and multiple identities Nevada Law Journal 13 2 16 Archived from the original on December 11 2017 Retrieved December 11 2017 Hines Melissa 2005 Brain Gender Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518836 3 OCLC 846105995 Nestle Joan Howell Clare Wilchins Riki Anne eds 2002 GenderQueer Voices from Beyond the Sexual Binary Los Angeles Alyson Books ISBN 978 1 55583 730 3 OCLC 50389309 Peterson Tim Trace Tolbert T C eds 2013 Troubling the Line Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics Callicoon Nightboat Books ISBN 978 1 937658 10 6 OCLC 839307399 Richards C Bouman W P amp Barker M J 2017 Genderqueer and non binary genders London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 51052 5 OCLC 1021393997 Scout July 23 2013 A Male B Female C Both D Neither The Huffington Post AOL Archived from the original on July 27 2013 Retrieved August 2 2013 Stryker Susan Whittle Stephen eds 2006 The Transgender Studies Reader New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 58005 184 2 OCLC 50389309 External links nbsp The dictionary definition of non binary at Wiktionary nbsp Quotations related to Non binary gender at Wikiquote Portals nbsp LGBT nbsp Transgender Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Non binary gender amp oldid 1186688416, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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