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Wikipedia

Scott Long

Scott Long (born June 5, 1963, in Radford, Virginia) is a US-born activist for international human rights, primarily focusing on the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people. He founded the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch, the first-ever program on LGBT rights at a major "mainstream" human rights organization, and served as its executive director from May 2004 - August 2010.[1][2] He later was a visiting fellow in the Human Rights Program of Harvard Law School from 2011 to 2012.[1][3]

Scott Long
Human rights activist Scott Long
Born (1963-06-05) June 5, 1963 (age 60)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materRadford University
Harvard University
Known forHuman rights/LGBT rights activism
Websitehttp://paper-bird.net

Journalist Rex Wockner called Long "arguably the most knowledgeable person on the planet about international LGBT issues."[4] David Mixner called him "one of the unsung heroes of the LGBT community."[5] Long's blog, A Paper Bird, which focuses on global politics and sexuality, has been acclaimed as "must-read," [6] "indispensable," [7] and "brilliant."[8] Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, praised Long's "exemplary dedication and diligence," saying that "His articulate and relentless defense of LGBT rights everywhere is unparalleled, and his tremendous efforts on this front have been a guiding voice for justice and equality."[9]

Early life edit

Scott Long was born June 5, 1963, in Radford, Virginia. He graduated from Radford University at the age of 18,[1] and received a Ph.D. in literature from Harvard University in 1989 at the age of 25.[1] In 1990 he moved to Hungary, and taught literature at the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest.[1] He became involved with the emerging lesbian and gay movement in Hungary as it developed during the democratic transition. He organized the first course on sexuality and gender at the Eötvös Loránd University.

Early human rights activism edit

In 1992 Long accepted a senior Fulbright professorship teaching American studies at the University of Cluj-Napoca, Romania. There, together with a few underground Romanian activists, he became deeply involved in campaigning for LGBT rights in Romania, including campaigns against Article 200 of the Romanian penal code, a law dating from the Ceauşescu dictatorship that criminalized consensual homosexual acts with five years' imprisonment.

Working independently from any institution, Long visited dozens of Romanian prisons over the following years, interviewing prisoners, linking them to legal assistance, and documenting torture and arbitrary arrest of lesbians as well as gay men. One of the first cases he investigated was that of Ciprian Cucu and Marian Mutașcu, two young men – respectively 17 and 19 – who had become lovers. Jailed for months, the two were tortured brutally. Soon after Marian Mutascu committed suicide.[10] Long visited their home towns, interviewed family members, and confronted the arresting officer and prosecutors.[11] Information he provided persuaded Amnesty International to recognize the two men as prisoners of conscience, the first time the organization had taken up the case of a couple jailed for their sexual orientation. The international pressure Long helped create won the two their freedom.

Long was an outspoken voice on LGBT rights within Romania, participating in a controversial Bucharest conference on "Homosexuality: A human right?" organized in 1995 by the Dutch Embassy and UNESCO – the first public discussion of LGBT human rights in the country.[12][13] He was a founding member of the Romanian gay and lesbian organization Accept.[13] His documentation was crucial in persuading the Council of Europe to strengthen its stand on lesbian and gay issues, and to demand that Romania repeal its sodomy law. His work spearheaded a European campaign and contributed strongly to Romania's eventual repeal of Article 200 in 2001.[14]

In 1993 Long conducted the first-ever mission to Albania to investigate the state of LGBT rights and to meet with gay activists there, and his documentation of arrests and abuses helped lead to the repeal of that country's sodomy law.

IGLHRC edit

 
Mariana Cetiner, possibly the last person jailed in Romania for her sexual orientation. Long visited her in prison, documented her story, persuaded Amnesty International to take up her case, and personally lobbied President Emil Constantinescu to pardon her

Returning to the United States in 1996, Long accepted a position with the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) — a NGO combating rights abuses based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and HIV status — first as its advocacy director, then as program director. He continued to work with activists in Romania, returning to the country in 1997 for additional research. During that research, he learned of the imprisonment of Mariana Cetiner, a woman given a three-year sentence for attempting to have sex with another woman. Long later testified to the U.S. Congress that

I interviewed Mariana in prison. She had enormous bruises; she had been physically and sexually abused by the guards. The prison doctor told us, "After all, she is different from other women. You can hardly expect the guards to treat her as if she were normal.[15]

Long documented Cetiner's story and persuaded Amnesty International to adopt her as a prisoner of conscience, the first time the organization had taken up the case of a lesbian imprisoned for her sexual orientation. Later that year, he wrote Public Scandals: Sexual Orientation and Criminal Law in Romania, a detailed study jointly published by IGLHRC and Human Rights Watch – the first report on LGBT issues ever issued by the latter organization.[11]

In Bucharest in 1998, Long met with Romanian president Emil Constantinescu, who "promised to pardon all those incarcerated under Article 200 and to give priority to the repeal of the discriminatory article."[16] Long specifically lobbied for Mariana Cetiner, who was promptly freed on the president's order. In the next three years, according to political scientist Clifford Bob, Long "enthusiastically and skillfully" pushed the Romanian government toward full repeal of Article 200, which was finally achieved in 2001.[13]

Between 1998 and 2002, he organized a project bringing many grassroots lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender activists from the global South to speak and advocate before the then United Nations Commission on Human Rights. Long also gave UN bodies extensive information and analyses on abuses against LGBT people.[17] This lobbying brought about an unprecedented commitment by key U.N. human rights officials to work on issues of sexual orientation and gender identity. In 2001, six independent experts—high-level individuals appointed by the UN to investigate patterns of human rights abuse—publicly reached out to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities, formally declaring that these issues lay within their official mandates. Long said of the move, "Today the United Nations has lived up to its promise: to defend the dignity of all people without exception."[18]

Long also led IGLHRC's lobbying at the groundbreaking 2001 United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS. IGLHRC was invited to address the session, then blocked by conservative Islamic states and the Holy See. The crisis eventually reached the floor of the General Assembly, which had never discussed LGBT rights before but was forced to vote on whether the LGBT group could speak. Long's advocacy led to a victory and to IGLHRC's reinstatement. "This was the first time a gay and lesbian issue has ever been debated on the floor of the General Assembly," Long commented on the unprecedented vote. "It's a precedent that will have serious impact on the way vulnerable groups and marginalized groups and outsiders from all parts of society can get involved in the U.N."[19]

 
Queer activists joined by Scott Long (center, behind flag) participate in Zimbabwe's first-ever LGBT rights march on Human Rights Day, December 10, 1998, in Harare

From 1998, when he led a delegation to the World Council of Churches's world conference in Harare, Zimbabwe, and visited Zambia during a huge national furor over a young gay man's public coming-out in the media, Long was closely involved with sexual rights movements across Africa.[20] He connected homophobia and moral panics in many African countries to economic and political factors, especially the poverty and dislocation caused by structural adjustment programs. In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, Long said that "there's a sense of economic and political powerlessness, and when you feel powerless about your economy and your country's politics there's a tendency to turn to culture as the one thing you can exert control over."[21] In 2003, IGLHRC and Human Rights Watch released More than a Name: State-Sponsored Homophobia and its Consequences in Southern Africa, a 300-page investigation of the roots of homophobia that Long had researched and authored.[22]

Long also co-authored or edited major reports on gay, lesbian, and transgender parenting, and on sexuality-based attacks on women's organizing. He also wrote a widely used guide to grassroots advocacy at the United Nations. While at IGLHRC, Long was responsible for one of the first broad statements on sex workers' rights ever issued by any international human rights organization, affirming that "Sex workers enjoy the rights to work, to equality before the law, to family, to sustenance, and to a sexual life, in the same degree and under the same conditions as do all other persons."[23]

Human Rights Watch edit

Egypt edit

 
The Queen Boat floating discotheque in the Nile in Cairo

In 2002, Long left IGLHRC to join Human Rights Watch (HRW), the largest U.S.-based human rights organization. Since 2001, Long had been deeply engaged in combating a crackdown on homosexual conduct in Egypt.[24] In May 2001, police in Cairo raided a floating Nile discothèque called the Queen Boat, arresting dozens of men and staging a show trial for "blasphemy" as well as "debauchery."[25] Long later wrote:

On the night of May 11, 2001, as I worked late in my office in New York, my inbox began filling with e-mails from [an] anonymous man, whose roommate had been seized in the discotheque raid. His messages spread news of the arrests around the world.[26]

Long went to Egypt for the first time to attend and report on their trial. In succeeding months, hundreds, possibly thousands of other men were arrested in raids and through Internet entrapment. Working for Human Rights Watch, Long lived in Egypt for several months in 2003 documenting the extent of this crackdown.[27] Through Human Rights Watch, he also documented a brutal government assault on anti-war activists, Islamists, and the political Left,[28] as well as persecution of African refugees and other vulnerable groups. In all this, Long worked closely with Egyptian human rights organizations, including the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, the El Nadeem Center for Psychological Management and Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence, and the Hisham Mubarak Law Center. The bridges he built helped persuade parts of Egypt's human rights community to take lesbian and gay issues within their work.

In 2004 in Cairo, together with Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth, Long launched a report[29] on the Egyptian crackdown against gays. In Cairo, Long and Roth met with Egyptian officials including the country's Prosecutor General and deputy Minister of Interior. Human Rights Watch later stated:

Perhaps [Long's] most significant achievement was working cooperatively with Egypt's human rights community to develop a strong and unified response to the crackdowns. In the end, five major Egyptian human rights groups joined Long and Human Rights Watch in announcing and carrying out advocacy based on the documented abuse, making clear their conviction that sexual rights claims were core human rights concerns--a position still atypical at the time.[30]

The New York Times praised the strategic way Long framed his advocacy:

Human Rights Watch avoided laying itself open to easy attack as the bearer of an outsider's agenda, [instead] packaging Queen Boat advocacy in the larger context of torture. … In Human Rights Watch's 150-page report on the crackdown, references to religion, homosexual rights or anything else that could be seen or used as code for licentiousness were played down. Torture was played up, and it may very well be the first and last human rights report to cite Michel Foucault's "History of Sexuality."[31]

The crackdown and the arrests in Egypt abruptly stopped, apparently on the day of the release of Long's report. There were almost no arrests under Egypt's "debauchery" law for the next nine years. The Times observed,

[T]he all-out campaign of arrest and entrapment of men that began with the Queen Boat incident came to an end. One well-connected lawyer noted that a high-ranking Ministry of Interior source told him, "It is the end of the gay cases in Egypt, because of the activities of some human rights organizations."[31]

Speaking to the Times, Long "reflected on his advocacy methods in a context in which human rights, and especially gay rights, are increasingly associated with Western empire-building":

Perhaps we had less publicity for the report in the United States because we avoided fetishizing beautiful brown men in Egypt being denied the right to love … We wrote for an Egyptian audience and tried to make this intelligible in terms of the human rights issues that have been central in Egyptian campaigns. It may not have made headlines, but it seemed to make history.[31]

Long's work on Egypt also focused on the medicalization of sexuality, including the practice of inflicting spurious forensic anal examinations on suspected gay men to "prove" their guilt. Long had already documented this practice in Romania.[32] He wrote and advocated extensively against the exams, arguing that they constituted torture.[33]

Human Rights Watch established its Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Rights Program in 2004, with Long as director. Bruce Rabb, a member of HRW's governing board, remembered that when Long spoke to the board, "The depth of Scott's knowledge and the passion he had for his work, combined with the dramatic effectiveness of his research and advocacy in Egypt, made it clear to all present that, while setting up an LGBT program would break significant new ground for Human Rights Watch, Scott's program would be core to Human Rights Watch's mission and definitely should be undertaken."[30]

Moral panics edit

After his time in Egypt, Long's work increasingly explored how governments (and forces bidding for political power) exploit fears around sexuality and gender to create massive moral panics. This kind of cultural backlash, Long argued, endangers not just LGBT people but human rights in general. In an influential 2005 essay on "Sexuality and the 'Cultural' War on Human Rights," he wrote:

A spectre is stalking the arenas where human rights activists work. ...The forces in question define themselves most often by what they claim to defend—and that shifts from time to time and territory to territory: "culture," "tradition," "values," or "religion." What they share is a common target: sexual rights and sexual freedoms. These are most often represented by women's reproductive rights, the assault on which continues. The most vividly drawn and violently reviled enemy typically is homosexuality. "Gay and lesbian rights," the dignity of people with different desires, the basic principle of non-discrimination based on sexual orientation: all these are painted as incompatible with fundamental values, even with humanity itself. The target is chosen with passion, but also precision and care. Movements for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender people, along with movements that assert sexual rights more generally, are arguably the most vulnerable edge of the human rights movement. In country after country they are easy to defame and discredit. But the attack on them also opens space for attacking human rights principles themselves—as not universal but "foreign," as not protectors of diversity but threats to sovereignty, and as carriers of cultural perversion.[34]

Long concluded:

Cultures are made up of faces. They are not monoliths; they are composed of diverse individuals, each contributing to and minutely changing what the culture means and does. When a culture is reinvented for ideological purposes as a faceless, seamless whole—incapable of dissent from within, so that any dissenter automatically becomes an outsider; incapable of changing, so that growth seems like destruction—it has ceased to be an environment in which people can live and interpret their lives. … The role of human rights principles, unquestionably, is to mark out spaces of personal freedom, to affirm areas where individual privacy and dignity and autonomy should prevail against state or community regulation. But human rights principles also defend communities…. They ensure diversity both among communities and cultures, and within them. Rights work does not promise utopia, only an endless process of protecting basic human values against constantly renewing threats. But it also does not promise the dissolution of cultures or the annihilation of traditions. It helps to ensure that they remain responsive to the human beings they contain.[34]

Jamaica edit

Later in 2004, Long worked to launch a Human Rights Watch report[35] on homophobic violence and HIV/AIDS in Jamaica. The report stimulated an intense debate in Jamaica and across the Caribbean over homosexuality and the region's colonial-era sodomy laws, a furious controversy which continued into the next decade. Editorials condemning Jamaica's anti-gay policies appeared in publications such as The New York Times[36] and The Economist,[37] and filled the Jamaican press as well. For the first time the government suggested a willingness to modify its repressive legislation on consensual sexual acts. Long continued to cast a spotlight on abuses in Jamaica during the following years, and to demand government action against them. "Gays and lesbians in Jamaica face violence at home, in public, even in a house of worship, and official silence encourages the spread of hate," he said in 2008.[38] "What stands out about Jamaica is how absolutely, head-in-the-sand unwilling the authorities have been for years to acknowledge or address homophobic violence," he commented in 2009.[39]

Eastern Europe edit

 
Scott Long outside Tverskoia police station, central Moscow, May 27, 2007

In the mid-2000s, Eastern Europe saw a backlash against LGBT rights. Long cited the evidence of an "unexpected Europe" rolling back the post-1989 democratic advances: "faces bleeding, people running, the air streaked with tear-gas trails. These photographs have burst forth every spring and summer for several years, as LGBT groups try to stage pride marches in Kraków, Chișinău, Moscow." Bans on LGBT pride marches, he wrote, "became a way of defining who belonged in the public sphere, who could participate in politics at all."[40]

Long campaigned against attacks on pride marches from Latvia[41] to Moldova.[42] Human Rights Watch opposed the homophobic policies of President Lech Kaczynski's right-wing government in Poland. "As mayor of Warsaw, President Kaczynski opposed the right of lesbian and gay people to basic freedoms and equal respect," Long said. "As president, he will determine whether Poland protects rights or chips away at them."[43] He supported pride activists in Poland against government attacks.[44] Human Rights Watch also campaigned against the Kaczynski government's attempts to curtail free speech on LGBT issues.[45]

Long went to Moscow in 2006 to support Russian activists, including Nikolay Alexeyev, attempting to organize a gay pride march in defiance of an official ban. The ban was part of a general strangling of civil society as President Vladimir Putin's regime became more authoritarian. Long witnessed and reported on skinhead and police violence against marchers, including a brutal attack on German member of the Bundestag Volker Beck.[46] Long documented collusion between police and violent right-wing extremists, and "evidence that the police lured the lesbian and gay activists... to be beaten, then selectively jailed."[47] He wrote of his own experience at the abortive march:

All of a sudden the OMON police were there too. Instead of trying to separate skinheads and gays, though, they surrounded all of us in a double line, constricting the circle and shoving the crowd tightly together so that we were jammed up against each other—for maximum damage. The crush was paralyzing – I could barely breathe. The extremists were delivering body blows to people around me right and left. ... Finally the circle opened enough for most of us inside to escape. Various other people were arrested outside the circle. Yevgeniya Debryanskaya, one of the founders of the lesbian movement in Russia, was giving a media interview nearby. Police seized her and a friend and bundled her into the police van.[47]

Long again documented violence and police arrests at Moscow Pride 2007, where he was briefly detained. He wrote a report on those abuses, co-published by Human Rights Watch and the International Lesbian and Gay Association - Europe.[48]

Sub-Saharan Africa edit

Long continued to work with and support LGBT activists in Africa. During his tenure, Human Rights Watch embarked on in-depth investigations of punitive rapes of black lesbians and transgender men in South Africa;[49] arrests of LGBT people in Cameroon;[50] and the impact of Senegal's sodomy law.[51] Long cooperated closely with activists in Nigeria in opposing the "Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act" introduced in 2006, which would have punished displays of same-sex affection as well as any public statements in support of LGBT people's freedoms.[52] Human Rights Watch's advocacy helped ensure the bill failed in several legislative sessions, though a version became law many years later, in 2014. Long repeatedly stressed that state-sponsored homophobia and repressive laws against LGBT people in Africa should not be seen in isolation, but as part of broader government campaigns against civil society. "If the national assembly can strip one group of its freedoms, then the liberties of all Nigerians are at risk," he said.[52]

Long also campaigned for years against homophobic policies in Uganda. He traced connections between discrimination in Uganda and Bush administration-era policies in the U.S., arguing in 2007 that "When the U.S. funds abstinence-only programmes in Uganda, it tells people that LGBT people's sexualities are dangerous and must be denied."[53] Long and Human Rights Watch also documented how U.S. anti-HIV/AIDS funding had been funneled to groups actively promoting homophobia in Uganda.[54] Long's efforts [55][56] drew the direct ire not only of the Ugandan government but of notoriously homophobic preacher Martin Ssempa.[57] Long helped coordinate international responses to the draconian Anti-Homosexuality Bill after it was introduced in 2009, working to ensure that international groups took their guidance from domestic Ugandan advocates.[58] The bill "is clearly an attempt to divide and weaken civil society by striking at one of its most marginalized groups," he said; "the government may be starting here, but who will be next?" [58] In an interview shortly after the bill's appearance, Long explained its origins in the politics of moral panic:

[T]he preparation for it has been laid by years of fanatical homophobic agitation in Uganda that comes from the president and comes from the first lady and comes from ... the minister of ethics and integrity, James Nsaba Buturo ... Uganda has gone through 25 or 30 years of civil war. You can stand in Kampala and it looks like a beautiful, placid, just lovely place, and then you remember what's happened to many of the people walking by you on the street in the last two decades, and you remember the civil war that's still raging in the north, and you realize how much fear there is underneath the surface. And I think the Museveni government has been actually very clever at focusing all of people's anxieties on homosexuality as ... the universal target and the universal scapegoat.[4]

Long added, though, that

The preamble to the bill was, I think, pretty clearly written by U.S. evangelicals or folks who are connected with U.S. evangelicals. We know that [U.S. evangelicals were] doing evangelical missions to Uganda earlier this year and raising the red flag about homosexuality. We know, moreover, that PEPFAR, the President's Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief, under the Bush administration was not only funding evangelical, homophobic, Christian -- and in some cases Muslim -- movements in Uganda, but they were also funding U.S. evangelical churches to go over to Uganda ... So the U.S. under the previous administration was implicated in this up to its elbows and U.S. right-wing churches are in this up to their elbows. And they're targeting Africa, not just Uganda. ... And that's one reason why the Uganda bill is so alarming. It's not just what it represents for Uganda, where things are bad already, it's that it represents a foothold by these forces inside Africa ... in creating new legal prohibitions on sexual autonomy, on homosexuality, and using homosexuality as a wedge issue to establish their own power.[4]

Other work edit

In 2006, Long was the main author of a report on binational same-sex couples and the discrimination they face in U.S. immigration law, amid a fierce religious and social backlash against recognition of same-sex relationships in the United States.[59] Long also wrote a survey of the strategies, priorities, and needs of grassroots sexual-rights activism around the globe,[40] and together with Indian activist Alok Gupta a history of the colonial origins of sodomy laws around the world.[60]

Under Long's leadership, Human Rights Watch also documented discrimination and violence against LGBT people in Iran;[61] violence against lesbians and transgender men in Kyrgyzstan;[62] violence and discrimination against LGBT people in Turkey;[63] killings and abuses of transgender people in Honduras;[64] and moral panics over gender in Kuwait and the Gulf states, and their human rights consequences.[65] In 2010, Susana T. Fried of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) said, "Compared to a decade ago, many more governments and international organizations recognize the rights and lives of LGBT people as their legitimate concern ... Scott has made innumerable contributions to this change, and his leadership has been vital."[30]

Yogyakarta Principles edit

Long played a key role in developing the Yogyakarta Principles, an influential set of guidelines on how human rights law applies to issues of sexual orientation and gender identity. Long helped conceive the principles' scope and shape, and served on a secretariat that drafted an initial version for the 16 experts who debated and finalized them. He also attended the final experts' meeting in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, in November 2006.[10] The principles have been a crucial tool for local activists in lobbying governments, and an important "soft law" way to expand international protections for LGBT people.

"Underground railroad" from Iraq edit

In early 2009, Iraqi militias in Baghdad and elsewhere began a massive campaign of brutal murders, targeting men suspected of homosexual conduct. Reports that emerged from Iraq were initially confused and contradictory, until Long and Human Rights Watch went to Iraq to find the facts behind the stories of lethal violence, and – in a unique project – to help as many men as possible escape. According to New York magazine,

Since February, Long had been hearing from foreign rights groups about a wave of anti-gay violence in Iraq, but so far the accounts were unsubstantiated. On April 1, one of Long's colleagues, Rasha Moumneh, was the first person from the organization to be put in touch with a gay Iraqi. … He related what had happened to him and said that he had heard rumors of similar attacks on other gay men. He said the situation was dire. HRW typically investigates human-rights abuses and publishes reports intended to spotlight problems, but the group rarely intervenes directly in a situation. In this case, however, Long decided that if [the man] were left in Iraq, he, and probably many more men like him, could be killed.

Long and Moumneh formulated a plan. They would build an underground railroad of sorts, reaching out to gay men in Iraq through the Internet and their existing contacts in Iraq, then advising and supporting gay Iraqis until they could ferry them to a safe city somewhere in Iraq, then to a haven elsewhere in the region, and eventually perhaps to the West.

On Monday, April 6, Long and his colleagues began posting warnings and requests for information on the 1,100 Iraqi ads on Manjam, an international gay personals site. Over the next two weeks, more than 50 men replied to the HRW notices. ... On the morning of April 7, Long's phone rang. The young man on the other end of the line was sobbing. …. The man's name was Fadi. Two of his friends had just been murdered. He had been threatened earlier in the day, with a letter written in blood. He was sure he would be killed soon.[66]

As the stories multiplied, Long and his colleagues travelled to Iraq, arranging for the transit of several dozen men out of the country through a northern Iraqi city.

Long and Moumneh spent two weeks in the Iraqi city. As men arrived from Baghdad and elsewhere in the country, the two aid workers helped them get settled, interviewed them to verify their stories, made arrangements for travel to the safe city in the nearby country, and set up places for them to stay once they got there. At first, Long and Moumneh didn't introduce the men to each another so that they wouldn't attract any more attention than necessary from local security officials, especially since a number of the men were staying in the same hotel. … For the most part, the Iraqi city was a way station, and the men spent their days waiting. Long and Moumneh provided them with living expenses, and took them to a local site or two, but mainly encouraged them to stay indoors and avoid scrutiny.[66]

In addition to assisting numerous men to flee the violence to safer countries, Long researched a detailed report on the pattern of death-squad killings, placing main responsibility squarely on Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army, which hoped to use a moral panic to reassert its relevance amid the US "surge" in Iraq. Human Rights Watch estimated that hundreds of men may have been murdered, though the tide of killings appeared to recede after the report's release.[67]

In a later interview, Long spoke about the relation between individual stories and the "traditional" HRW focus on large-scale, systemic change, using the lessons of the Iraq "underground railroad":

In this program at Human Rights Watch we do a lot more work with individuals than any other part of Human Rights Watch does. For the most part, Human Rights Watch focuses on the big picture. We look at patterns of violations and policy recommendations to fix them. And I think that's very important in dealing with LGBT rights, partly because we get told so often that these abuses are sporadic or unsystematic or accidental or they just don't happen, you know? I think being able to demonstrate: "No, there is a syndrome, there is a pattern, these are serious, they happen to a lot people" -- it's critical for getting attention paid to them.

But the fact is that in most countries in the world, still, things that happen to queer folks are shrouded in secrecy and stigma and shame ... It requires much more effort for us to find the stories and to find people who are willing to talk to us and to find people to whom this has happened. And because of that, we need to pay attention to the individual abuses because they are often our only key to finding out what the larger pattern is. It's only by grabbing that single thread that we can untangle the whole carpet of abuses that people are facing.

So, I make it very much our policy here that when we have somebody come to us with an individual story ... we should always try to answer and figure out what we can do, because ... if we hadn't done that in Iraq we would never have found out the scope of what was going on there... It's really critical.[4]

He added:

My basic philosophy is that every case is an impact case, that every case in some incremental fashion -- every success, every life saved, every person got out of immediate danger, every person who's freed from the threat of jail -- advances that larger process of change in some fashion....You are going to be dealing with the one person whose story opens up the stories of 10, 20, 100, 1,000 others. My feeling is always that by getting that individual's story out, you can illuminate the lives of others and help them, but if you can't do something for that one person, then you're not ultimately going to be able to do much effectively for the 1,000, the 10,000, the million.[4]

Long continued to work in support of Iraqis' rights and lives for many years. In 2012, when a new wave of death-squad killings erupted in Baghdad, Long—by then a fellow at Harvard Law School—demonstrated that the attack grew from a state-promoted moral panic over "emos"[68] allegedly corrupting Iraqi youth.[69][70] Long produced evidence that security forces were implicated in the killings,[71][72] and showed how other victims, such as men seen as "effeminate" or gay, were being swept up in the murders as well.[73] Long personally posted warnings in Arabic on more than 500 Iraqis' personals sites and ads with advice about safety.[74] Long's research was cited in The New York Times.[75] Long has also written on Iraq for publications including the Guardian[76] and Jadaliyya.[77]

Controversies edit

The Middle East expert and academic Joseph Massad has repeatedly criticized Long as an example of what Massad calls the "Gay International," a complex of Western organizations, activists and academics that has embarked on a project "to universalize itself ... [b]y inciting discourse about homosexuals where none existed before." Massad accuses the Gay International of actually worsening the situation for the people it claims to help, by aggressively imposing its identity categories of "homosexual" and "heterosexual" upon "a world that is being forced to be fixed by a Western binary." Massad contends that the Gay International's missionary activities have especially targeted the Arab and Muslim worlds, and Long has been a key agent, one who was "rewarded with employment at Human Rights Watch" and who "became an instant expert speaking on 'gays' in Arab countries on radio shows and at public lectures."[78]

Paradoxically, Long was also criticized from the opposite perspective. Other campaigners, especially the British activist Peter Tatchell, attacked him for questioning the universal validity of "gay" identity. Long's work produced controversy in 2005 and 2006 after photographs of the hanging of two teenagers in the city of Mashhad, Iran went viral on the web. Tatchell, gay writer Doug Ireland, and U.S. activist Michael Petrelis insisted that the youths were hanged not for the rape of a 13-year-old (as initially reported in the Iranian press) but for being gay.[79] Long and Human Rights Watch, while conducting intensive research on the situation for LGBT people in Iran, maintained the evidence in the Mashhad case was inconclusive, and also questioned assigning the youths a Western "gay" identity in a culturally complex situation where neither they nor others around them were able to speak for themselves. Long urged that the executions should be condemned, but that it was not necessary to believe the youths were either "gay" or completely innocent to do so. "Rights aren't for saints, and if we only defend them for people onto whom we can project our own qualities, our own identities, we aren't activists but narcissists with attitude," he said. "If these kids aren't 'gay,' or 'innocent,' but are 'straight' or 'guilty,' does it make their fear less horrible, their suffering less real? Does it make them less dead?"[80] Long was attacked for a social constructionist approach to LGBT activism. Some, including Tatchell, questioned whether his work reflected covertly pro-Islamic sympathies.[81]

In 2009, Long wrote an article, published in the Routledge journal Contemporary Politics,[82] on Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni which sharply criticized the accuracy of claims Tatchell and OutRage! had made about Iran. Peter Tatchell wrote to Human Rights Watch in 2010, and Kenneth Roth and Long issued an apology in June 2010.[83] Taylor & Francis issued an apology in 2012 declaring there were "substantial innaccuracies" in the essay.[84][85][86]

The article had been widely praised; Dianne Otto, a professor of international law, called it "meticulous genealogy of some western LGBTI advocacy of sexuality rights in Iran."[87] Long asserted that Tatchell intimidated HRW and Taylor & Francis with legal threats under English defamation law,[88] while Tatchell claims he never made any legal threats against Human Rights Watch, and that Taylor & Francis only retracted the paper because it had claims that were unsubstantiated.[89] Tatchell has been accused of intimidating or harassing other critics with threats of action under England's libel laws, at the time some of the most restrictive in the world. In 2009, Tatchell had induced a small UK feminist publisher to withdraw an anthology that contained an article critical of him, and to publish an extensive apology.[90][91][92] In an open letter published in February 2016, 165 activists and academics cited the withdrawal of Long's article as well as other incidents and accused Tatchell of "intolerance of criticism and disrespect for others' free expression."[93]

Later activism edit

Long suffered severe pulmonary embolisms in July 2010.[30] He wrote, "While running to catch a bus on a New York street, I saw a blinding effusion of white light, amid which several spangled and bell-bottomed figures vaguely resembling ABBA beckoned me to an eternal disco complete with spinning ball. Yanked back from their blandishments by a superior fashion sense, I spent a couple of weeks in intensive care."[94] Long resigned from Human Rights Watch the following month in order to recuperate. In his resignation letter, published in English and Spanish, he recollected that

One of the most basic splits in contemporary human rights work – sometimes mapped onto a division between "global South" and "global North," though not quite reducible to it – is between rights as a set of legal norms, and rights as a complex of human dreams and political aspirations. The split has to do, as well, with the difference between institutions and movements, the former ones formal and developing their own standards and needs, the latter fluid and chaotic and responsible to individuals' and communities' desires and drives … Human Rights Watch – and other international organizations like it – needs a far deeper understanding of what social movements are, why they are important, how they turn human rights into living values rather than legal abstractions.[94]

In fall 2010, Long was a senior fellow at the Center for Gender and Sexuality Law at Columbia University Law School. From January 2011 - September 2012, he was a visiting fellow at the Human Rights Program at Harvard Law School.[1]

In late 2012, Long moved to Cairo, Egypt. The New York Times reported that he was "researching a book about sexual politics."[95] Although for nine years Egypt's law against "debauchery" had almost never been enforced, after the July 2013 military coup that brought General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to power, a new crackdown on LGBT people began.[96][97] More than 150 people were arrested in the next 18 months. Long documented the arrests from the start,[98] interviewing as many as possible of the victims and publicizing many accounts on his blog, A Paper Bird.[99] He stressed the role of gender (rather than sexual orientation) in the persecution, and the way that transgender women and "effeminate" men were especially targeted for arrest.[100] Long worked on a legal guide for endangered LGBT Egyptians that was published, in Arabic, on his blog.[101][102] He also published warnings, in both English and Arabic,[103] about Internet entrapment[104] and surveillance[105] in Egypt and how to protect online privacy.

Long helped organize several social media campaigns in Egypt to mobilize opposition to the crackdown.[106][107] In December 2014, he was the first to break the news of a police raid on a Cairo bathhouse led by prominent journalist Mona Iraqi. 26 men were arrested and charged with "debauchery" in the most high-profile gay trial since the Queen Boat. The shocking pictures of the raid Long published galvanized indignation at the arrests, both inside Egypt and beyond.[108] Partly as a result a court eventually acquitted all the men, a victory highly unusual under the draconian Sisi regime.[109] Long was interviewed extensively by publications such as The New York Times,[95] the Guardian,[110] BuzzFeed,[111] and Global Post,[112] as well as in the Egyptian media.[113][114][115] He also wrote about the human rights crisis in Egypt in such venues as the Irish Times[116] and the Advocate.[117]

In April 2015, Long made a rare comment on the level of personal danger he felt:

I sometimes seem insouciant about threats in Egypt, but I'm not. It's just that the atmosphere of threat is general here. It affects every corner of your personality, yet it's hard to take it personally, so wide is the danger spread. ... Yesterday, talking with a reporter in the usual seedy Cairo café — a place I've always considered safe — I saw a well-dressed man at the next table listening intently. Finally he interrupted. He gathered I was interested in human rights, he said. What did I do? Did I work for Freedom House? Freedom House is, of course, a banned organization, its local office raided and shuttered by the military regime back in 2011. I said no. He added, almost enticingly, that he himself had been tortured, and offered to show me his scars. I gave him my contact information and told him to call me. That was simple responsibility – you do not refuse a torture victim anything you can give; but afterwards I cringed inside. It's how things are in Egypt. Other people, foreign passport-holders among them, have been arrested for "political" conversations in public places. You don't know if the person who approaches you is victim or violator, survivor of torture or State Security agent; or both.[118]

Awards edit

In June 1997, Long received an Achievement Award from nine Hungarian lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender organizations, "in recognition of years of work in building and strengthening the Hungarian LGBT community and the cause of LGBT human rights."[1]

In 2010, Long received the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by the Harvard Lambda Law Association, an "Annual award given to someone whose life's work has significantly advanced the human and civil rights of LGBT people."[1]

In 2007, Long and Human Rights Watch received the Global Justice Award of the Worldwide Fellowship of the Metropolitan Community Churches, in recognition of "groundbreaking work defending LGBT people worldwide from violence, discrimination, and abuse."[119]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Scott Long". LinkedIn. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  2. ^ "Human Rights Watch website, LGBT Section". 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  3. ^ "Past Visiting Fellows". Harvard University. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e Wockner, Rex (January 15, 2010). "Interview with Scott Long, director of Human Rights Watch's LGBT Rights Division". LGBT Asylum News. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  5. ^ Mixner, David (February 26, 2010). "Human Rights Watch: Our Quiet Heroes". Live from Hell's Kitchen. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  6. ^ Langlois, Anthony J. (November 9, 2014). "Pinkwashing Apple". The Disorder of Things. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  7. ^ Currah, Paisley (November 5, 2013). "What Does Solidarity Look Like? The 2014 Winter Olympics". The Feminist Wire. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  8. ^ Tamás, Gáspár Miklós (July 8, 2015). "TGM: Kurta válasz Felcsuti Péternek". Magyar Narancs. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  9. ^ Wockner, Rex (September 2, 2010). "Scott Long leaves Human Rights Watch". PrideSource. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  10. ^ a b Long, Scott (2008). "Two Novembers: Movements, Rights, and the Yogyakarta Principles". Human Rights Watch World Report 2008. Retrieved August 7, 2015.
  11. ^ a b Long, Scott. "Public Scandals: Sexual Orientation and Criminal Law in Romania". Human Rights Watch and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, 1998. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  12. ^ Tanaka, Jennifer K. (1995-05-31). "Report on the Symposium Homosexuality: A Human Right?". Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  13. ^ a b c Bob, Clifford (2012). The Global Right Wing and the Clash of World Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2012 ed.). p. 97. ISBN 9780521145442.
  14. ^ Stychin, Carl F. (2003). Governing Sexuality: The Changing Politics of Citizenship and Law Reform (Hart Publishing, 2003 ed.). p. 118. ISBN 978-1841132679.
  15. ^ "Congressional Human Rights Caucus: Testimony of Scott Long, Advocacy Coordinator, The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, August 7, 1998". Congressional Record. 144 (13): 19239. 1998. ISBN 9780160515873. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  16. ^ Ramet, Sabrina B., "The way we were - and should be again? European orthodox churches and the 'idyllic past'", Religion in an Expanding Europe, ed. Byrnes, Timothy A., and Katzenstein, Peter J. (Cambridge University Press, 2006) p.168.
  17. ^ Long, Scott (2001). (PDF). International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. Archived from the original on October 21, 2013. Retrieved August 7, 2015.
  18. ^ "Historic Progress at the United Nations: IGLHRC Applauds UN Move to Address Human Rights Violations Against Sexual Minorities". International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. June 5, 2001. Retrieved August 4, 2015.
  19. ^ Lindsey, Daryl (June 28, 2011). "U.N. commits to AIDS reduction". Salon. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  20. ^ Long, Scott (July 6, 2014). "Sodomy in Zambia". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  21. ^ Goering, Laurie (June 9, 2004). "Africa's gays persecuted as cause of ills". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  22. ^ Long, Scott. "More Than A Name: State-Sponsored Homophobia and Its Consequences in Southern Africa" (PDF). Human Rights Watch and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, 1998. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  23. ^ "Bangladesh: IGLHRC mobilizes to defend sex industry workers". International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission. August 1, 1999. Retrieved August 4, 2015.
  24. ^ Levy, Sydney (August 19, 2002). . Archived from the original on 2006-09-25. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  25. ^ Salah, Heba (November 14, 2001). "Egypt jails men in gay sex trial". BBC News. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  26. ^ Long, Scott (Spring 2004). "Sex and Security in Egypt". MERIP no. 230. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
  27. ^ "Egypt jails men in gay sex trial". BBC News. 2003-03-15. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  28. ^ Stork, Joe (6 November 2003). "Egypt: Security Forces Abuse of Anti-War Demonstrators". Human Rights Watch, November 2003. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  29. ^ Long, Scott. "In a Time of Torture: The Assault on Justice in the Crackdown on Homosexual Conduct in Egypt". Human Rights Watch, 2004. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  30. ^ a b c d Human Rights Watch's Advisory Committee to the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Rights Program. "Statement on the resignation of Scott Long, founding director of the program". Human Rights Watch, August 23, 2010. Retrieved August 10, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  31. ^ a b c Azimi, Negar (December 3, 2006). "Prisoners of Sex". The New York Times. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  32. ^ Demick, Barbara (December 30, 1993). "It's Still A Crime To Be Gay In Romania: It Is One Of The Last Countries In Europe That Imprison Homosexuals". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  33. ^ Long, Scott (2004). "When Doctors Torture: The Anus and the State in Egypt and Beyond" (PDF). Journal of Health and Human Rights. 7 (2): 114–140. doi:10.2307/4065350. JSTOR 4065350.
  34. ^ a b Long, Scott (2005). "Anatomy of a Backlash: Sexuality and the 'Cultural' War on Human Rights" (PDF). Human Rights Watch World Report 2005. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  35. ^ Schleifer, Rebecca. "Hated to Death: Homophobia, Violence, and Jamaica's HIV/AIDS Epidemic" (PDF). Human Rights Watch, 2004. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  36. ^ "Editorial: Who Murdered Steve Harvey?". The New York Times. December 13, 2005. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  37. ^ "AIDS in Jamaica: The Fear that Spreads Death". The Economist. November 25, 2004. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  38. ^ Grew, Tony (February 4, 2008). "Human Rights Group Condemns Jamaica Violence". Pink News. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  39. ^ Fontaine, Smokey (July 20, 2009). "Gays In Jamaica Live In Fear". News One for Black America. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  40. ^ a b Long, Scott (11 June 2009). "Together, Apart. Organizing around Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Worldwide". Human Rights Watch, 2009. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  41. ^ "Latvia: Promote Equality, Investigate Attacks on LGBT Pride Activists: HRW Letter to the Prime Minister". Human Rights Watch. July 25, 2006. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  42. ^ "Moldova: Reverse Ban on Gay Rights Demonstration". Human Rights Watch. May 18, 2006. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  43. ^ "Official Homophobia in Poland Threatens Human Rights – Scott Long of HRW". UK Gay News. February 16, 2006. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  44. ^ Shoffman, Mark (June 12, 2006). "Warsaw Gay Activists March With Pride". Pink News. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  45. ^ Scally, Derek (March 20, 2007). "Polish Plan to Ban Gay Material From Schools Under Fire". Irish Times. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
  46. ^ "MoscowPride '06". 2006-05-27. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  47. ^ a b Long, Scott (May 29, 2006). "Moskou Pride – verslag van Scott Long HRW". COC Nederland. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  48. ^ Long, Scott. ""We Have the Upper Hand": Freedom of Assembly in Russia and the Human Rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People" (PDF). Human Rights Watch and the European Region of the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA– Europe), 2007. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  49. ^ Nath, Dipika (5 December 2011). "'We'll Show You You're a Woman': Violence and Discrimination Against Black Lesbians and Transgender Men in South Africa". Human Rights Watch, 2011. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  50. ^ Cano Nieto, Juliana (4 November 2010). "Criminalizing Identities: Rights Abuses in Cameroon Based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity". Human Rights Watch, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  51. ^ Nath, Dipika (30 November 2010). "Fear for Life: Violence against Gay Men and Men Perceived as Gay in Senegal". Human Rights Watch, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  52. ^ a b "Nigeria: Anti-Gay Bill Threatens Democratic Reforms". Human Rights Watch. February 28, 2007. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  53. ^ "HRW: US should halt funds for homophobic Uganda". The Mail & Guardian. October 12, 2007. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  54. ^ Long, Scott (October 11, 2007). "Letter to Congressional Caucus about US support for Ugandan homophobia". Human Rights Watch. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  55. ^ "Uganda: State Homophobia Threatens Health and Human Rights". Human Rights Watch. August 22, 2007. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  56. ^ Long, Scott (August 23, 2007). "Letter from Human Rights Watch to Ugandan President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni Regarding Homophobia and HIV" (PDF). Human Rights Watch. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  57. ^ Ssempa, Martin (September 4, 2007). . New Vision (Uganda). Archived from the original on March 19, 2015. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  58. ^ a b "Uganda: 'Anti-Homosexuality' Bill Threatens Liberties and Human Rights Defenders". Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG), Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, World AIDS Campaign. October 9, 2009. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  59. ^ Long, Scott; Stern, Jessica; Francoeur, Adam (May 2006). "Family, Unvalued: Discrimination , Denial, and the Fate of Binantional Same-Sex Couples Under US Law". Human Rights Watch and Immigration Equality, 2006. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  60. ^ Gupta, Alok; Long, Scott (17 December 2008). "This Alien Legacy: The Origins of "Sodomy" Laws in British Colonialism". Human Rights Watch, 2008. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  61. ^ Sanei, Faraz (15 December 2010). "'We Are a Buried Generation': Discrimination and Violence Against Sexual Minorities in Iran". Human Rights Watch, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  62. ^ Stern, Jessica; Long, Scott (6 October 2008). "These Everyday Humiliations: Violence Against Lesbians, Bisexual Women, and Transgender Men in Kyrgyzstan". Human Rights Watch, 2008. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  63. ^ Cano Nieto, Juliana; Long, Scott (21 May 2008). "'We Need a Law for Liberation': Gender, Sexuality, and Human Rights in a Changing Turkey". Human Rights Watch, 2008. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  64. ^ Cano Nieto, Juliana (29 May 2009). "'Not Worth a Penny': Human Rights Abuses Against Transgender People in Honduras". Human Rights Watch, 2009. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  65. ^ Moumneh, Rasha (15 January 2012). "'They Hunt Us Down for Fun': Discrimination and Police Violence Against Transgender Women in Kuwait". Human Rights Watch, 2012. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  66. ^ a b McAllester, Matt (October 12, 2009). "The Hunted: How A Few New Yorkers Are Trying to Save the Hunted Gay Men of Iraq". New York Magazine. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  67. ^ Scott, Long (17 August 2009). "'They Want us Exterminated': Murder, Torture, Sexual Orientation and Gender in Iraq". Human Rights Watch, 2009. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  68. ^ Long, Scott (March 9, 2012). "Graphic pictures from Iraq's anti-Emo killing campaign". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  69. ^ Long, Scott (March 8, 2012). "'Gay killings,' emos, and Iraq: What's going on". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  70. ^ Long, Scott (March 8, 2012). "Iraq and the Emo killings". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  71. ^ Long, Scott (March 9, 2012). "The Emo killings in Iraq: The police and their smoking gun". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  72. ^ Long, Scott (March 25, 2012). "'A war against me, inside and outside': Security forces, denials, and emos in Iraq". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  73. ^ Long, Scott (March 21, 2012). "'You are killing the nation, not emos': more from Iraq". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  74. ^ Long, Scott (March 16, 2012). "Death and life in Iraq: Obama death cabs, vampires, Ministries, and murder". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  75. ^ Healy, Jack (March 11, 2012). "Threats and Killings Striking Fear Among Young Iraqis, Including Gays". The New York Times. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  76. ^ Long, Scott (March 18, 2012). "Massacre of Emos in Iraq Goes to Core of a Damaged Society". The Guardian. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  77. ^ Long, Scott (February 11, 2015). "ISIS Kills Gays: A History of Violence". Jadaliyya. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  78. ^ Massad, Joseph (2012). Desiring Arabs (University of Chicago Press, 2007 ed.). pp. 174–188. ISBN 9780226509587.
  79. ^ Long, Scott (July 20, 2015). "Gay hanging in Iran: Atrocities and impersonations". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
  80. ^ Andriette, Bill (October 2005). "Pictures At An Execution". The Guide (archived at williamapercy.com). Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  81. ^ Schindler, Paul (March 27, 2008). . Gay City News. Archived from the original on September 21, 2008. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  82. ^ Long, Scott (March 2009). "Unbearable Witness: How Western Activists (Mis)Recognize Sexuality in Iran". Contemporary Politics. 5 (1): 119–136. doi:10.1080/13569770802698054.
  83. ^ . PinkNews. 2 July 2010. Archived from the original on 15 January 2016.
  84. ^ "Peter Tatchell: an apology and correction". Contemporary Politics. 18 (3): 269. 2012. doi:10.1080/13569775.2012.704201. ISSN 1356-9775. S2CID 218543774.
  85. ^ . PinkNews. 27 November 2012. Archived from the original on 12 December 2015.
  86. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 February 2016.
  87. ^ Otto, Dianne (2013). "Transnational Homo-Assemblages: Reading 'Gender' in Counter-terrorism Discourses". Jindal Global Law Review. 4 (2).
  88. ^ Long, Scott (February 19, 2015). "Help, I'm being persecuted: Hypocrisy and free speech". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  89. ^ Duffy, Nick (22 Feb 2016). "Academics and activists condemn 'bully' Peter Tatchell in open letter". PinkNews. Retrieved June 3, 2021. I never made any 'legal threats' against Human Rights Watch.
  90. ^ Rothe, Johanna (October 15, 2009). "Out of Place, Out of Print: On the Censorship of the First Queerness/Raciality Collection in Britain". Monthly Review. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  91. ^ "On the censorship of 'Gay Imperialism' and Out of Place". XTalk Project. October 17, 2009. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  92. ^ Douglas, Stacy (September 2009). "On Defending Raw Nerve Books: Or, The Stuff of Good Feeling". Upping the Anti. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  93. ^ "Open Letter on Peter Tatchell, Censorship, and Criticism". AlanaLentin.Net. February 22, 2016. Retrieved March 16, 2016.
  94. ^ a b "Scott Long". Gspottt•T&T's Triggersite for Sogi Passion & Advocacy. August 24, 2010. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  95. ^ a b Londono, Ernesto (October 6, 2014). "The Crackdown on Gay Men in Egypt". The New York Times. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  96. ^ Long, Scott (October 14, 2013). "New arrests for 'homosexuality' in Egypt". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  97. ^ Long, Scott (November 11, 2013). "Military manhood: More arrests for homosexual conduct in Egypt". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  98. ^ Mezzofiore, Gianluca (October 14, 2013). "Egypt: Police Arrest 14 at Health Centre for 'Practising Homosexuality'". International Business Times. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  99. ^ Long, Scott (January 19, 2015). "Why the crackdown in Egypt isn't over, and what to do about it". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  100. ^ Long, Scott (May 16, 2014). "Brutal gender crackdown in Egypt: The tomorrows that never came". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  101. ^ Long, Scott (September 28, 2014). "ما لا تعرفه عن "بلو كوت" "وسي إيجيبت" .. قصة مراقبة الإنترنت في مصر". Zahma.com. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  102. ^ Long, Scott (12 June 2015). "الشرطة المصرية تلاحق المجتمع المثلي / Internet entrapment in Egypt: Protect yourself!". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  103. ^ Long, Scott (September 25, 2014). "Meet the Businessmen Who Want Egypt's Internet Users Jailed, Tortured, and Killed". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  104. ^ Long, Scott (September 22, 2014). "Egypt: Tweet and blog against homophobic brutality, September 24 and 25". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved July 31, 2015.
  105. ^ Long, Scott (May 17, 2015). "Tweet for Egypt on IDAHOT: Why it's important". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  106. ^ Long, Scott (December 8, 2014). "Dozens arrested for "perversion" in a huge raid in Cairo". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  107. ^ Long, Scott (January 12, 2015). "Victory". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  108. ^ Kingsley, Patrick (January 12, 2015). "Cairo Men Cleared of Bathhouse Debauchery". The Guardian. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  109. ^ Feder, J. Lester (September 23, 2014). "LGBT Egyptians Go Into Hiding As Regime Cracks Down". BuzzFeed. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  110. ^ Dean, Laura (June 14, 2015). "Transgender People Are At the Center of a Brutal Crackdown on LGBT Egyptians". Global Post. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  111. ^ Carr, Sarah (November 25, 2013). "Of Moral Panics and State Security: Nationalist Fervor and Gay Men". Mada Masr. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  112. ^ Magid, Pesha (November 4, 2014). "الأخلاق.. سلاح الدولة في مواجهة المثليين حملة جديدة على المصريين أصحاب الميول الجنسية المختلفة والمتحولين جنسيًا في إطار الموجة المحافظة التي تقودها الدولة". Mada Masr. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  113. ^ Magid, Pesha (June 4, 2015). "ماذا يعني أن تكون متحولًا جنسيًا في مصر". Mada Masr. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  114. ^ Long, Scott (March 11, 2015). "Western Governments Should Demand Egypt Stop Its 'Murderous Repression'". Irish Times. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  115. ^ Long, Scott; Youssef, Ramy (March 11, 2015). "Op-Ed: John Kerry Needs to Do the Right Thing in Egypt". The Advocate. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  116. ^ Long, Scott (April 18, 2015). "Deport me!". A Paper Bird: Sex, Rights, and the World. Retrieved August 11, 2015.
  117. ^ "Metropolitan Community Church Honors Human Rights Watch: Award Recognizes Groundbreaking Work on LGBT Rights". Human Rights Watch. June 28, 2007. Retrieved August 8, 2015.

External links edit

  • Human Rights Watch Main Page
  • International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission
  • a paper bird, Long's personal blog

scott, long, professor, statistics, sociology, born, june, 1963, radford, virginia, born, activist, international, human, rights, primarily, focusing, rights, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, lgbt, people, founded, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, rights, progra. For the professor of statistics and sociology see J Scott Long Scott Long born June 5 1963 in Radford Virginia is a US born activist for international human rights primarily focusing on the rights of lesbian gay bisexual and transgender LGBT people He founded the Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program at Human Rights Watch the first ever program on LGBT rights at a major mainstream human rights organization and served as its executive director from May 2004 August 2010 1 2 He later was a visiting fellow in the Human Rights Program of Harvard Law School from 2011 to 2012 1 3 Scott LongHuman rights activist Scott LongBorn 1963 06 05 June 5 1963 age 60 Radford Virginia USA NationalityAmericanAlma materRadford UniversityHarvard UniversityKnown forHuman rights LGBT rights activismWebsitehttp paper bird net Journalist Rex Wockner called Long arguably the most knowledgeable person on the planet about international LGBT issues 4 David Mixner called him one of the unsung heroes of the LGBT community 5 Long s blog A Paper Bird which focuses on global politics and sexuality has been acclaimed as must read 6 indispensable 7 and brilliant 8 Hadi Ghaemi executive director of the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran praised Long s exemplary dedication and diligence saying that His articulate and relentless defense of LGBT rights everywhere is unparalleled and his tremendous efforts on this front have been a guiding voice for justice and equality 9 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early human rights activism 3 IGLHRC 4 Human Rights Watch 4 1 Egypt 4 2 Moral panics 4 3 Jamaica 4 4 Eastern Europe 4 5 Sub Saharan Africa 4 6 Other work 5 Yogyakarta Principles 6 Underground railroad from Iraq 7 Controversies 8 Later activism 9 Awards 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEarly life editScott Long was born June 5 1963 in Radford Virginia He graduated from Radford University at the age of 18 1 and received a Ph D in literature from Harvard University in 1989 at the age of 25 1 In 1990 he moved to Hungary and taught literature at the Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest 1 He became involved with the emerging lesbian and gay movement in Hungary as it developed during the democratic transition He organized the first course on sexuality and gender at the Eotvos Lorand University Early human rights activism editIn 1992 Long accepted a senior Fulbright professorship teaching American studies at the University of Cluj Napoca Romania There together with a few underground Romanian activists he became deeply involved in campaigning for LGBT rights in Romania including campaigns against Article 200 of the Romanian penal code a law dating from the Ceausescu dictatorship that criminalized consensual homosexual acts with five years imprisonment Working independently from any institution Long visited dozens of Romanian prisons over the following years interviewing prisoners linking them to legal assistance and documenting torture and arbitrary arrest of lesbians as well as gay men One of the first cases he investigated was that of Ciprian Cucu and Marian Mutașcu two young men respectively 17 and 19 who had become lovers Jailed for months the two were tortured brutally Soon after Marian Mutascu committed suicide 10 Long visited their home towns interviewed family members and confronted the arresting officer and prosecutors 11 Information he provided persuaded Amnesty International to recognize the two men as prisoners of conscience the first time the organization had taken up the case of a couple jailed for their sexual orientation The international pressure Long helped create won the two their freedom Long was an outspoken voice on LGBT rights within Romania participating in a controversial Bucharest conference on Homosexuality A human right organized in 1995 by the Dutch Embassy and UNESCO the first public discussion of LGBT human rights in the country 12 13 He was a founding member of the Romanian gay and lesbian organization Accept 13 His documentation was crucial in persuading the Council of Europe to strengthen its stand on lesbian and gay issues and to demand that Romania repeal its sodomy law His work spearheaded a European campaign and contributed strongly to Romania s eventual repeal of Article 200 in 2001 14 In 1993 Long conducted the first ever mission to Albania to investigate the state of LGBT rights and to meet with gay activists there and his documentation of arrests and abuses helped lead to the repeal of that country s sodomy law IGLHRC edit nbsp Mariana Cetiner possibly the last person jailed in Romania for her sexual orientation Long visited her in prison documented her story persuaded Amnesty International to take up her case and personally lobbied President Emil Constantinescu to pardon herReturning to the United States in 1996 Long accepted a position with the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission IGLHRC a NGO combating rights abuses based on sexual orientation gender identity and HIV status first as its advocacy director then as program director He continued to work with activists in Romania returning to the country in 1997 for additional research During that research he learned of the imprisonment of Mariana Cetiner a woman given a three year sentence for attempting to have sex with another woman Long later testified to the U S Congress thatI interviewed Mariana in prison She had enormous bruises she had been physically and sexually abused by the guards The prison doctor told us After all she is different from other women You can hardly expect the guards to treat her as if she were normal 15 Long documented Cetiner s story and persuaded Amnesty International to adopt her as a prisoner of conscience the first time the organization had taken up the case of a lesbian imprisoned for her sexual orientation Later that year he wrote Public Scandals Sexual Orientation and Criminal Law in Romania a detailed study jointly published by IGLHRC and Human Rights Watch the first report on LGBT issues ever issued by the latter organization 11 In Bucharest in 1998 Long met with Romanian president Emil Constantinescu who promised to pardon all those incarcerated under Article 200 and to give priority to the repeal of the discriminatory article 16 Long specifically lobbied for Mariana Cetiner who was promptly freed on the president s order In the next three years according to political scientist Clifford Bob Long enthusiastically and skillfully pushed the Romanian government toward full repeal of Article 200 which was finally achieved in 2001 13 Between 1998 and 2002 he organized a project bringing many grassroots lesbian gay bisexual and transgender activists from the global South to speak and advocate before the then United Nations Commission on Human Rights Long also gave UN bodies extensive information and analyses on abuses against LGBT people 17 This lobbying brought about an unprecedented commitment by key U N human rights officials to work on issues of sexual orientation and gender identity In 2001 six independent experts high level individuals appointed by the UN to investigate patterns of human rights abuse publicly reached out to lesbian gay bisexual and transgender LGBT communities formally declaring that these issues lay within their official mandates Long said of the move Today the United Nations has lived up to its promise to defend the dignity of all people without exception 18 Long also led IGLHRC s lobbying at the groundbreaking 2001 United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV AIDS IGLHRC was invited to address the session then blocked by conservative Islamic states and the Holy See The crisis eventually reached the floor of the General Assembly which had never discussed LGBT rights before but was forced to vote on whether the LGBT group could speak Long s advocacy led to a victory and to IGLHRC s reinstatement This was the first time a gay and lesbian issue has ever been debated on the floor of the General Assembly Long commented on the unprecedented vote It s a precedent that will have serious impact on the way vulnerable groups and marginalized groups and outsiders from all parts of society can get involved in the U N 19 nbsp Queer activists joined by Scott Long center behind flag participate in Zimbabwe s first ever LGBT rights march on Human Rights Day December 10 1998 in HarareFrom 1998 when he led a delegation to the World Council of Churches s world conference in Harare Zimbabwe and visited Zambia during a huge national furor over a young gay man s public coming out in the media Long was closely involved with sexual rights movements across Africa 20 He connected homophobia and moral panics in many African countries to economic and political factors especially the poverty and dislocation caused by structural adjustment programs In an interview with the Chicago Tribune Long said that there s a sense of economic and political powerlessness and when you feel powerless about your economy and your country s politics there s a tendency to turn to culture as the one thing you can exert control over 21 In 2003 IGLHRC and Human Rights Watch released More than a Name State Sponsored Homophobia and its Consequences in Southern Africa a 300 page investigation of the roots of homophobia that Long had researched and authored 22 Long also co authored or edited major reports on gay lesbian and transgender parenting and on sexuality based attacks on women s organizing He also wrote a widely used guide to grassroots advocacy at the United Nations While at IGLHRC Long was responsible for one of the first broad statements on sex workers rights ever issued by any international human rights organization affirming that Sex workers enjoy the rights to work to equality before the law to family to sustenance and to a sexual life in the same degree and under the same conditions as do all other persons 23 Human Rights Watch editEgypt edit nbsp The Queen Boat floating discotheque in the Nile in CairoIn 2002 Long left IGLHRC to join Human Rights Watch HRW the largest U S based human rights organization Since 2001 Long had been deeply engaged in combating a crackdown on homosexual conduct in Egypt 24 In May 2001 police in Cairo raided a floating Nile discotheque called the Queen Boat arresting dozens of men and staging a show trial for blasphemy as well as debauchery 25 Long later wrote On the night of May 11 2001 as I worked late in my office in New York my inbox began filling with e mails from an anonymous man whose roommate had been seized in the discotheque raid His messages spread news of the arrests around the world 26 Long went to Egypt for the first time to attend and report on their trial In succeeding months hundreds possibly thousands of other men were arrested in raids and through Internet entrapment Working for Human Rights Watch Long lived in Egypt for several months in 2003 documenting the extent of this crackdown 27 Through Human Rights Watch he also documented a brutal government assault on anti war activists Islamists and the political Left 28 as well as persecution of African refugees and other vulnerable groups In all this Long worked closely with Egyptian human rights organizations including the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights the El Nadeem Center for Psychological Management and Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence and the Hisham Mubarak Law Center The bridges he built helped persuade parts of Egypt s human rights community to take lesbian and gay issues within their work In 2004 in Cairo together with Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth Long launched a report 29 on the Egyptian crackdown against gays In Cairo Long and Roth met with Egyptian officials including the country s Prosecutor General and deputy Minister of Interior Human Rights Watch later stated Perhaps Long s most significant achievement was working cooperatively with Egypt s human rights community to develop a strong and unified response to the crackdowns In the end five major Egyptian human rights groups joined Long and Human Rights Watch in announcing and carrying out advocacy based on the documented abuse making clear their conviction that sexual rights claims were core human rights concerns a position still atypical at the time 30 The New York Times praised the strategic way Long framed his advocacy Human Rights Watch avoided laying itself open to easy attack as the bearer of an outsider s agenda instead packaging Queen Boat advocacy in the larger context of torture In Human Rights Watch s 150 page report on the crackdown references to religion homosexual rights or anything else that could be seen or used as code for licentiousness were played down Torture was played up and it may very well be the first and last human rights report to cite Michel Foucault s History of Sexuality 31 The crackdown and the arrests in Egypt abruptly stopped apparently on the day of the release of Long s report There were almost no arrests under Egypt s debauchery law for the next nine years The Times observed T he all out campaign of arrest and entrapment of men that began with the Queen Boat incident came to an end One well connected lawyer noted that a high ranking Ministry of Interior source told him It is the end of the gay cases in Egypt because of the activities of some human rights organizations 31 Speaking to the Times Long reflected on his advocacy methods in a context in which human rights and especially gay rights are increasingly associated with Western empire building Perhaps we had less publicity for the report in the United States because we avoided fetishizing beautiful brown men in Egypt being denied the right to love We wrote for an Egyptian audience and tried to make this intelligible in terms of the human rights issues that have been central in Egyptian campaigns It may not have made headlines but it seemed to make history 31 Long s work on Egypt also focused on the medicalization of sexuality including the practice of inflicting spurious forensic anal examinations on suspected gay men to prove their guilt Long had already documented this practice in Romania 32 He wrote and advocated extensively against the exams arguing that they constituted torture 33 Human Rights Watch established its Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program in 2004 with Long as director Bruce Rabb a member of HRW s governing board remembered that when Long spoke to the board The depth of Scott s knowledge and the passion he had for his work combined with the dramatic effectiveness of his research and advocacy in Egypt made it clear to all present that while setting up an LGBT program would break significant new ground for Human Rights Watch Scott s program would be core to Human Rights Watch s mission and definitely should be undertaken 30 Moral panics edit After his time in Egypt Long s work increasingly explored how governments and forces bidding for political power exploit fears around sexuality and gender to create massive moral panics This kind of cultural backlash Long argued endangers not just LGBT people but human rights in general In an influential 2005 essay on Sexuality and the Cultural War on Human Rights he wrote A spectre is stalking the arenas where human rights activists work The forces in question define themselves most often by what they claim to defend and that shifts from time to time and territory to territory culture tradition values or religion What they share is a common target sexual rights and sexual freedoms These are most often represented by women s reproductive rights the assault on which continues The most vividly drawn and violently reviled enemy typically is homosexuality Gay and lesbian rights the dignity of people with different desires the basic principle of non discrimination based on sexual orientation all these are painted as incompatible with fundamental values even with humanity itself The target is chosen with passion but also precision and care Movements for the rights of lesbian gay bisexual or transgender people along with movements that assert sexual rights more generally are arguably the most vulnerable edge of the human rights movement In country after country they are easy to defame and discredit But the attack on them also opens space for attacking human rights principles themselves as not universal but foreign as not protectors of diversity but threats to sovereignty and as carriers of cultural perversion 34 Long concluded Cultures are made up of faces They are not monoliths they are composed of diverse individuals each contributing to and minutely changing what the culture means and does When a culture is reinvented for ideological purposes as a faceless seamless whole incapable of dissent from within so that any dissenter automatically becomes an outsider incapable of changing so that growth seems like destruction it has ceased to be an environment in which people can live and interpret their lives The role of human rights principles unquestionably is to mark out spaces of personal freedom to affirm areas where individual privacy and dignity and autonomy should prevail against state or community regulation But human rights principles also defend communities They ensure diversity both among communities and cultures and within them Rights work does not promise utopia only an endless process of protecting basic human values against constantly renewing threats But it also does not promise the dissolution of cultures or the annihilation of traditions It helps to ensure that they remain responsive to the human beings they contain 34 Jamaica edit Later in 2004 Long worked to launch a Human Rights Watch report 35 on homophobic violence and HIV AIDS in Jamaica The report stimulated an intense debate in Jamaica and across the Caribbean over homosexuality and the region s colonial era sodomy laws a furious controversy which continued into the next decade Editorials condemning Jamaica s anti gay policies appeared in publications such as The New York Times 36 and The Economist 37 and filled the Jamaican press as well For the first time the government suggested a willingness to modify its repressive legislation on consensual sexual acts Long continued to cast a spotlight on abuses in Jamaica during the following years and to demand government action against them Gays and lesbians in Jamaica face violence at home in public even in a house of worship and official silence encourages the spread of hate he said in 2008 38 What stands out about Jamaica is how absolutely head in the sand unwilling the authorities have been for years to acknowledge or address homophobic violence he commented in 2009 39 Eastern Europe edit nbsp Scott Long outside Tverskoia police station central Moscow May 27 2007In the mid 2000s Eastern Europe saw a backlash against LGBT rights Long cited the evidence of an unexpected Europe rolling back the post 1989 democratic advances faces bleeding people running the air streaked with tear gas trails These photographs have burst forth every spring and summer for several years as LGBT groups try to stage pride marches in Krakow Chișinău Moscow Bans on LGBT pride marches he wrote became a way of defining who belonged in the public sphere who could participate in politics at all 40 Long campaigned against attacks on pride marches from Latvia 41 to Moldova 42 Human Rights Watch opposed the homophobic policies of President Lech Kaczynski s right wing government in Poland As mayor of Warsaw President Kaczynski opposed the right of lesbian and gay people to basic freedoms and equal respect Long said As president he will determine whether Poland protects rights or chips away at them 43 He supported pride activists in Poland against government attacks 44 Human Rights Watch also campaigned against the Kaczynski government s attempts to curtail free speech on LGBT issues 45 Long went to Moscow in 2006 to support Russian activists including Nikolay Alexeyev attempting to organize a gay pride march in defiance of an official ban The ban was part of a general strangling of civil society as President Vladimir Putin s regime became more authoritarian Long witnessed and reported on skinhead and police violence against marchers including a brutal attack on German member of the Bundestag Volker Beck 46 Long documented collusion between police and violent right wing extremists and evidence that the police lured the lesbian and gay activists to be beaten then selectively jailed 47 He wrote of his own experience at the abortive march All of a sudden the OMON police were there too Instead of trying to separate skinheads and gays though they surrounded all of us in a double line constricting the circle and shoving the crowd tightly together so that we were jammed up against each other for maximum damage The crush was paralyzing I could barely breathe The extremists were delivering body blows to people around me right and left Finally the circle opened enough for most of us inside to escape Various other people were arrested outside the circle Yevgeniya Debryanskaya one of the founders of the lesbian movement in Russia was giving a media interview nearby Police seized her and a friend and bundled her into the police van 47 Long again documented violence and police arrests at Moscow Pride 2007 where he was briefly detained He wrote a report on those abuses co published by Human Rights Watch and the International Lesbian and Gay Association Europe 48 Sub Saharan Africa edit Long continued to work with and support LGBT activists in Africa During his tenure Human Rights Watch embarked on in depth investigations of punitive rapes of black lesbians and transgender men in South Africa 49 arrests of LGBT people in Cameroon 50 and the impact of Senegal s sodomy law 51 Long cooperated closely with activists in Nigeria in opposing the Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act introduced in 2006 which would have punished displays of same sex affection as well as any public statements in support of LGBT people s freedoms 52 Human Rights Watch s advocacy helped ensure the bill failed in several legislative sessions though a version became law many years later in 2014 Long repeatedly stressed that state sponsored homophobia and repressive laws against LGBT people in Africa should not be seen in isolation but as part of broader government campaigns against civil society If the national assembly can strip one group of its freedoms then the liberties of all Nigerians are at risk he said 52 Long also campaigned for years against homophobic policies in Uganda He traced connections between discrimination in Uganda and Bush administration era policies in the U S arguing in 2007 that When the U S funds abstinence only programmes in Uganda it tells people that LGBT people s sexualities are dangerous and must be denied 53 Long and Human Rights Watch also documented how U S anti HIV AIDS funding had been funneled to groups actively promoting homophobia in Uganda 54 Long s efforts 55 56 drew the direct ire not only of the Ugandan government but of notoriously homophobic preacher Martin Ssempa 57 Long helped coordinate international responses to the draconian Anti Homosexuality Bill after it was introduced in 2009 working to ensure that international groups took their guidance from domestic Ugandan advocates 58 The bill is clearly an attempt to divide and weaken civil society by striking at one of its most marginalized groups he said the government may be starting here but who will be next 58 In an interview shortly after the bill s appearance Long explained its origins in the politics of moral panic T he preparation for it has been laid by years of fanatical homophobic agitation in Uganda that comes from the president and comes from the first lady and comes from the minister of ethics and integrity James Nsaba Buturo Uganda has gone through 25 or 30 years of civil war You can stand in Kampala and it looks like a beautiful placid just lovely place and then you remember what s happened to many of the people walking by you on the street in the last two decades and you remember the civil war that s still raging in the north and you realize how much fear there is underneath the surface And I think the Museveni government has been actually very clever at focusing all of people s anxieties on homosexuality as the universal target and the universal scapegoat 4 Long added though that The preamble to the bill was I think pretty clearly written by U S evangelicals or folks who are connected with U S evangelicals We know that U S evangelicals were doing evangelical missions to Uganda earlier this year and raising the red flag about homosexuality We know moreover that PEPFAR the President s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief under the Bush administration was not only funding evangelical homophobic Christian and in some cases Muslim movements in Uganda but they were also funding U S evangelical churches to go over to Uganda So the U S under the previous administration was implicated in this up to its elbows and U S right wing churches are in this up to their elbows And they re targeting Africa not just Uganda And that s one reason why the Uganda bill is so alarming It s not just what it represents for Uganda where things are bad already it s that it represents a foothold by these forces inside Africa in creating new legal prohibitions on sexual autonomy on homosexuality and using homosexuality as a wedge issue to establish their own power 4 Other work edit In 2006 Long was the main author of a report on binational same sex couples and the discrimination they face in U S immigration law amid a fierce religious and social backlash against recognition of same sex relationships in the United States 59 Long also wrote a survey of the strategies priorities and needs of grassroots sexual rights activism around the globe 40 and together with Indian activist Alok Gupta a history of the colonial origins of sodomy laws around the world 60 Under Long s leadership Human Rights Watch also documented discrimination and violence against LGBT people in Iran 61 violence against lesbians and transgender men in Kyrgyzstan 62 violence and discrimination against LGBT people in Turkey 63 killings and abuses of transgender people in Honduras 64 and moral panics over gender in Kuwait and the Gulf states and their human rights consequences 65 In 2010 Susana T Fried of the United Nations Development Programme UNDP said Compared to a decade ago many more governments and international organizations recognize the rights and lives of LGBT people as their legitimate concern Scott has made innumerable contributions to this change and his leadership has been vital 30 Yogyakarta Principles editLong played a key role in developing the Yogyakarta Principles an influential set of guidelines on how human rights law applies to issues of sexual orientation and gender identity Long helped conceive the principles scope and shape and served on a secretariat that drafted an initial version for the 16 experts who debated and finalized them He also attended the final experts meeting in Yogyakarta Indonesia in November 2006 10 The principles have been a crucial tool for local activists in lobbying governments and an important soft law way to expand international protections for LGBT people Underground railroad from Iraq editIn early 2009 Iraqi militias in Baghdad and elsewhere began a massive campaign of brutal murders targeting men suspected of homosexual conduct Reports that emerged from Iraq were initially confused and contradictory until Long and Human Rights Watch went to Iraq to find the facts behind the stories of lethal violence and in a unique project to help as many men as possible escape According to New York magazine Since February Long had been hearing from foreign rights groups about a wave of anti gay violence in Iraq but so far the accounts were unsubstantiated On April 1 one of Long s colleagues Rasha Moumneh was the first person from the organization to be put in touch with a gay Iraqi He related what had happened to him and said that he had heard rumors of similar attacks on other gay men He said the situation was dire HRW typically investigates human rights abuses and publishes reports intended to spotlight problems but the group rarely intervenes directly in a situation In this case however Long decided that if the man were left in Iraq he and probably many more men like him could be killed Long and Moumneh formulated a plan They would build an underground railroad of sorts reaching out to gay men in Iraq through the Internet and their existing contacts in Iraq then advising and supporting gay Iraqis until they could ferry them to a safe city somewhere in Iraq then to a haven elsewhere in the region and eventually perhaps to the West On Monday April 6 Long and his colleagues began posting warnings and requests for information on the 1 100 Iraqi ads on Manjam an international gay personals site Over the next two weeks more than 50 men replied to the HRW notices On the morning of April 7 Long s phone rang The young man on the other end of the line was sobbing The man s name was Fadi Two of his friends had just been murdered He had been threatened earlier in the day with a letter written in blood He was sure he would be killed soon 66 As the stories multiplied Long and his colleagues travelled to Iraq arranging for the transit of several dozen men out of the country through a northern Iraqi city Long and Moumneh spent two weeks in the Iraqi city As men arrived from Baghdad and elsewhere in the country the two aid workers helped them get settled interviewed them to verify their stories made arrangements for travel to the safe city in the nearby country and set up places for them to stay once they got there At first Long and Moumneh didn t introduce the men to each another so that they wouldn t attract any more attention than necessary from local security officials especially since a number of the men were staying in the same hotel For the most part the Iraqi city was a way station and the men spent their days waiting Long and Moumneh provided them with living expenses and took them to a local site or two but mainly encouraged them to stay indoors and avoid scrutiny 66 In addition to assisting numerous men to flee the violence to safer countries Long researched a detailed report on the pattern of death squad killings placing main responsibility squarely on Moqtada al Sadr s Mahdi Army which hoped to use a moral panic to reassert its relevance amid the US surge in Iraq Human Rights Watch estimated that hundreds of men may have been murdered though the tide of killings appeared to recede after the report s release 67 In a later interview Long spoke about the relation between individual stories and the traditional HRW focus on large scale systemic change using the lessons of the Iraq underground railroad In this program at Human Rights Watch we do a lot more work with individuals than any other part of Human Rights Watch does For the most part Human Rights Watch focuses on the big picture We look at patterns of violations and policy recommendations to fix them And I think that s very important in dealing with LGBT rights partly because we get told so often that these abuses are sporadic or unsystematic or accidental or they just don t happen you know I think being able to demonstrate No there is a syndrome there is a pattern these are serious they happen to a lot people it s critical for getting attention paid to them But the fact is that in most countries in the world still things that happen to queer folks are shrouded in secrecy and stigma and shame It requires much more effort for us to find the stories and to find people who are willing to talk to us and to find people to whom this has happened And because of that we need to pay attention to the individual abuses because they are often our only key to finding out what the larger pattern is It s only by grabbing that single thread that we can untangle the whole carpet of abuses that people are facing So I make it very much our policy here that when we have somebody come to us with an individual story we should always try to answer and figure out what we can do because if we hadn t done that in Iraq we would never have found out the scope of what was going on there It s really critical 4 He added My basic philosophy is that every case is an impact case that every case in some incremental fashion every success every life saved every person got out of immediate danger every person who s freed from the threat of jail advances that larger process of change in some fashion You are going to be dealing with the one person whose story opens up the stories of 10 20 100 1 000 others My feeling is always that by getting that individual s story out you can illuminate the lives of others and help them but if you can t do something for that one person then you re not ultimately going to be able to do much effectively for the 1 000 the 10 000 the million 4 Long continued to work in support of Iraqis rights and lives for many years In 2012 when a new wave of death squad killings erupted in Baghdad Long by then a fellow at Harvard Law School demonstrated that the attack grew from a state promoted moral panic over emos 68 allegedly corrupting Iraqi youth 69 70 Long produced evidence that security forces were implicated in the killings 71 72 and showed how other victims such as men seen as effeminate or gay were being swept up in the murders as well 73 Long personally posted warnings in Arabic on more than 500 Iraqis personals sites and ads with advice about safety 74 Long s research was cited in The New York Times 75 Long has also written on Iraq for publications including the Guardian 76 and Jadaliyya 77 Controversies editThis article contains weasel words vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information Such statements should be clarified or removed October 2015 The Middle East expert and academic Joseph Massad has repeatedly criticized Long as an example of what Massad calls the Gay International a complex of Western organizations activists and academics that has embarked on a project to universalize itself b y inciting discourse about homosexuals where none existed before Massad accuses the Gay International of actually worsening the situation for the people it claims to help by aggressively imposing its identity categories of homosexual and heterosexual upon a world that is being forced to be fixed by a Western binary Massad contends that the Gay International s missionary activities have especially targeted the Arab and Muslim worlds and Long has been a key agent one who was rewarded with employment at Human Rights Watch and who became an instant expert speaking on gays in Arab countries on radio shows and at public lectures 78 Paradoxically Long was also criticized from the opposite perspective Other campaigners especially the British activist Peter Tatchell attacked him for questioning the universal validity of gay identity Long s work produced controversy in 2005 and 2006 after photographs of the hanging of two teenagers in the city of Mashhad Iran went viral on the web Tatchell gay writer Doug Ireland and U S activist Michael Petrelis insisted that the youths were hanged not for the rape of a 13 year old as initially reported in the Iranian press but for being gay 79 Long and Human Rights Watch while conducting intensive research on the situation for LGBT people in Iran maintained the evidence in the Mashhad case was inconclusive and also questioned assigning the youths a Western gay identity in a culturally complex situation where neither they nor others around them were able to speak for themselves Long urged that the executions should be condemned but that it was not necessary to believe the youths were either gay or completely innocent to do so Rights aren t for saints and if we only defend them for people onto whom we can project our own qualities our own identities we aren t activists but narcissists with attitude he said If these kids aren t gay or innocent but are straight or guilty does it make their fear less horrible their suffering less real Does it make them less dead 80 Long was attacked for a social constructionist approach to LGBT activism Some including Tatchell questioned whether his work reflected covertly pro Islamic sympathies 81 In 2009 Long wrote an article published in the Routledge journal Contemporary Politics 82 on Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni which sharply criticized the accuracy of claims Tatchell and OutRage had made about Iran Peter Tatchell wrote to Human Rights Watch in 2010 and Kenneth Roth and Long issued an apology in June 2010 83 Taylor amp Francis issued an apology in 2012 declaring there were substantial innaccuracies in the essay 84 85 86 The article had been widely praised Dianne Otto a professor of international law called it meticulous genealogy of some western LGBTI advocacy of sexuality rights in Iran 87 Long asserted that Tatchell intimidated HRW and Taylor amp Francis with legal threats under English defamation law 88 while Tatchell claims he never made any legal threats against Human Rights Watch and that Taylor amp Francis only retracted the paper because it had claims that were unsubstantiated 89 Tatchell has been accused of intimidating or harassing other critics with threats of action under England s libel laws at the time some of the most restrictive in the world In 2009 Tatchell had induced a small UK feminist publisher to withdraw an anthology that contained an article critical of him and to publish an extensive apology 90 91 92 In an open letter published in February 2016 165 activists and academics cited the withdrawal of Long s article as well as other incidents and accused Tatchell of intolerance of criticism and disrespect for others free expression 93 Later activism editLong suffered severe pulmonary embolisms in July 2010 30 He wrote While running to catch a bus on a New York street I saw a blinding effusion of white light amid which several spangled and bell bottomed figures vaguely resembling ABBA beckoned me to an eternal disco complete with spinning ball Yanked back from their blandishments by a superior fashion sense I spent a couple of weeks in intensive care 94 Long resigned from Human Rights Watch the following month in order to recuperate In his resignation letter published in English and Spanish he recollected that One of the most basic splits in contemporary human rights work sometimes mapped onto a division between global South and global North though not quite reducible to it is between rights as a set of legal norms and rights as a complex of human dreams and political aspirations The split has to do as well with the difference between institutions and movements the former ones formal and developing their own standards and needs the latter fluid and chaotic and responsible to individuals and communities desires and drives Human Rights Watch and other international organizations like it needs a far deeper understanding of what social movements are why they are important how they turn human rights into living values rather than legal abstractions 94 In fall 2010 Long was a senior fellow at the Center for Gender and Sexuality Law at Columbia University Law School From January 2011 September 2012 he was a visiting fellow at the Human Rights Program at Harvard Law School 1 In late 2012 Long moved to Cairo Egypt The New York Times reported that he was researching a book about sexual politics 95 Although for nine years Egypt s law against debauchery had almost never been enforced after the July 2013 military coup that brought General Abdel Fattah el Sisi to power a new crackdown on LGBT people began 96 97 More than 150 people were arrested in the next 18 months Long documented the arrests from the start 98 interviewing as many as possible of the victims and publicizing many accounts on his blog A Paper Bird 99 He stressed the role of gender rather than sexual orientation in the persecution and the way that transgender women and effeminate men were especially targeted for arrest 100 Long worked on a legal guide for endangered LGBT Egyptians that was published in Arabic on his blog 101 102 He also published warnings in both English and Arabic 103 about Internet entrapment 104 and surveillance 105 in Egypt and how to protect online privacy Long helped organize several social media campaigns in Egypt to mobilize opposition to the crackdown 106 107 In December 2014 he was the first to break the news of a police raid on a Cairo bathhouse led by prominent journalist Mona Iraqi 26 men were arrested and charged with debauchery in the most high profile gay trial since the Queen Boat The shocking pictures of the raid Long published galvanized indignation at the arrests both inside Egypt and beyond 108 Partly as a result a court eventually acquitted all the men a victory highly unusual under the draconian Sisi regime 109 Long was interviewed extensively by publications such as The New York Times 95 the Guardian 110 BuzzFeed 111 and Global Post 112 as well as in the Egyptian media 113 114 115 He also wrote about the human rights crisis in Egypt in such venues as the Irish Times 116 and the Advocate 117 In April 2015 Long made a rare comment on the level of personal danger he felt I sometimes seem insouciant about threats in Egypt but I m not It s just that the atmosphere of threat is general here It affects every corner of your personality yet it s hard to take it personally so wide is the danger spread Yesterday talking with a reporter in the usual seedy Cairo cafe a place I ve always considered safe I saw a well dressed man at the next table listening intently Finally he interrupted He gathered I was interested in human rights he said What did I do Did I work for Freedom House Freedom House is of course a banned organization its local office raided and shuttered by the military regime back in 2011 I said no He added almost enticingly that he himself had been tortured and offered to show me his scars I gave him my contact information and told him to call me That was simple responsibility you do not refuse a torture victim anything you can give but afterwards I cringed inside It s how things are in Egypt Other people foreign passport holders among them have been arrested for political conversations in public places You don t know if the person who approaches you is victim or violator survivor of torture or State Security agent or both 118 Awards editIn June 1997 Long received an Achievement Award from nine Hungarian lesbian gay bisexual and transgender organizations in recognition of years of work in building and strengthening the Hungarian LGBT community and the cause of LGBT human rights 1 In 2010 Long received the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by the Harvard Lambda Law Association an Annual award given to someone whose life s work has significantly advanced the human and civil rights of LGBT people 1 In 2007 Long and Human Rights Watch received the Global Justice Award of the Worldwide Fellowship of the Metropolitan Community Churches in recognition of groundbreaking work defending LGBT people worldwide from violence discrimination and abuse 119 See also editLGBT rights by country or territoryReferences edit a b c d e f g h Scott Long LinkedIn Retrieved July 27 2015 Human Rights Watch website LGBT Section 2006 Retrieved 2006 12 26 Past Visiting Fellows Harvard University Retrieved 19 May 2014 a b c d e Wockner Rex January 15 2010 Interview with Scott Long director of Human Rights Watch s LGBT Rights Division LGBT Asylum News Retrieved August 8 2015 Mixner David February 26 2010 Human Rights Watch Our Quiet Heroes Live from Hell s Kitchen Retrieved August 10 2015 Langlois Anthony J November 9 2014 Pinkwashing Apple The Disorder of Things Retrieved August 8 2015 Currah Paisley November 5 2013 What Does Solidarity Look Like The 2014 Winter Olympics The Feminist Wire Retrieved August 8 2015 Tamas Gaspar Miklos July 8 2015 TGM Kurta valasz Felcsuti Peternek Magyar Narancs Retrieved August 8 2015 Wockner Rex September 2 2010 Scott Long leaves Human Rights Watch PrideSource Retrieved August 8 2015 a b Long Scott 2008 Two Novembers Movements Rights and the Yogyakarta Principles Human Rights Watch World Report 2008 Retrieved August 7 2015 a b Long Scott Public Scandals Sexual Orientation and Criminal Law in Romania Human Rights Watch and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission 1998 Retrieved July 15 2015 Tanaka Jennifer K 1995 05 31 Report on the Symposium Homosexuality A Human Right Retrieved 2006 12 26 a b c Bob Clifford 2012 The Global Right Wing and the Clash of World Politics Cambridge University Press 2012 ed p 97 ISBN 9780521145442 Stychin Carl F 2003 Governing Sexuality The Changing Politics of Citizenship and Law Reform Hart Publishing 2003 ed p 118 ISBN 978 1841132679 Congressional Human Rights Caucus Testimony of Scott Long Advocacy Coordinator The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission August 7 1998 Congressional Record 144 13 19239 1998 ISBN 9780160515873 Retrieved August 13 2015 Ramet Sabrina B The way we were and should be again European orthodox churches and the idyllic past Religion in an Expanding Europe ed Byrnes Timothy A and Katzenstein Peter J Cambridge University Press 2006 p 168 Long Scott 2001 UN Sexual Minorities and the Work of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture PDF International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission Archived from the original on October 21 2013 Retrieved August 7 2015 Historic Progress at the United Nations IGLHRC Applauds UN Move to Address Human Rights Violations Against Sexual Minorities International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission June 5 2001 Retrieved August 4 2015 Lindsey Daryl June 28 2011 U N commits to AIDS reduction Salon Retrieved July 22 2015 Long Scott July 6 2014 Sodomy in Zambia A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Goering Laurie June 9 2004 Africa s gays persecuted as cause of ills Chicago Tribune Retrieved August 8 2015 Long Scott More Than A Name State Sponsored Homophobia and Its Consequences in Southern Africa PDF Human Rights Watch and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission 1998 Retrieved July 15 2015 Bangladesh IGLHRC mobilizes to defend sex industry workers International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission August 1 1999 Retrieved August 4 2015 Levy Sydney August 19 2002 groundbreaking step by major UN working body Archived from the original on 2006 09 25 Retrieved 2006 12 26 Salah Heba November 14 2001 Egypt jails men in gay sex trial BBC News Retrieved 2006 12 26 Long Scott Spring 2004 Sex and Security in Egypt MERIP no 230 Retrieved July 29 2015 Egypt jails men in gay sex trial BBC News 2003 03 15 Retrieved 2006 12 26 Stork Joe 6 November 2003 Egypt Security Forces Abuse of Anti War Demonstrators Human Rights Watch November 2003 Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott In a Time of Torture The Assault on Justice in the Crackdown on Homosexual Conduct in Egypt Human Rights Watch 2004 Retrieved July 22 2015 a b c d Human Rights Watch s Advisory Committee to the Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program Statement on the resignation of Scott Long founding director of the program Human Rights Watch August 23 2010 Retrieved August 10 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Azimi Negar December 3 2006 Prisoners of Sex The New York Times Retrieved July 31 2015 Demick Barbara December 30 1993 It s Still A Crime To Be Gay In Romania It Is One Of The Last Countries In Europe That Imprison Homosexuals The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved July 27 2015 Long Scott 2004 When Doctors Torture The Anus and the State in Egypt and Beyond PDF Journal of Health and Human Rights 7 2 114 140 doi 10 2307 4065350 JSTOR 4065350 a b Long Scott 2005 Anatomy of a Backlash Sexuality and the Cultural War on Human Rights PDF Human Rights Watch World Report 2005 Retrieved August 10 2015 Schleifer Rebecca Hated to Death Homophobia Violence and Jamaica s HIV AIDS Epidemic PDF Human Rights Watch 2004 Retrieved July 31 2015 Editorial Who Murdered Steve Harvey The New York Times December 13 2005 Retrieved July 27 2015 AIDS in Jamaica The Fear that Spreads Death The Economist November 25 2004 Retrieved July 27 2015 Grew Tony February 4 2008 Human Rights Group Condemns Jamaica Violence Pink News Retrieved August 13 2015 Fontaine Smokey July 20 2009 Gays In Jamaica Live In Fear News One for Black America Retrieved August 13 2015 a b Long Scott 11 June 2009 Together Apart Organizing around Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Worldwide Human Rights Watch 2009 Retrieved July 15 2015 Latvia Promote Equality Investigate Attacks on LGBT Pride Activists HRW Letter to the Prime Minister Human Rights Watch July 25 2006 Retrieved August 14 2015 Moldova Reverse Ban on Gay Rights Demonstration Human Rights Watch May 18 2006 Retrieved August 14 2015 Official Homophobia in Poland Threatens Human Rights Scott Long of HRW UK Gay News February 16 2006 Retrieved August 14 2015 Shoffman Mark June 12 2006 Warsaw Gay Activists March With Pride Pink News Retrieved August 14 2015 Scally Derek March 20 2007 Polish Plan to Ban Gay Material From Schools Under Fire Irish Times Retrieved August 14 2015 MoscowPride 06 2006 05 27 Retrieved 2006 12 26 a b Long Scott May 29 2006 Moskou Pride verslag van Scott Long HRW COC Nederland Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott We Have the Upper Hand Freedom of Assembly in Russia and the Human Rights of Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender People PDF Human Rights Watch and the European Region of the International Lesbian and Gay Association ILGA Europe 2007 Retrieved July 31 2015 Nath Dipika 5 December 2011 We ll Show You You re a Woman Violence and Discrimination Against Black Lesbians and Transgender Men in South Africa Human Rights Watch 2011 Retrieved July 31 2015 Cano Nieto Juliana 4 November 2010 Criminalizing Identities Rights Abuses in Cameroon Based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Human Rights Watch 2010 Retrieved July 31 2015 Nath Dipika 30 November 2010 Fear for Life Violence against Gay Men and Men Perceived as Gay in Senegal Human Rights Watch 2010 Retrieved July 31 2015 a b Nigeria Anti Gay Bill Threatens Democratic Reforms Human Rights Watch February 28 2007 Retrieved August 8 2015 HRW US should halt funds for homophobic Uganda The Mail amp Guardian October 12 2007 Retrieved August 13 2015 Long Scott October 11 2007 Letter to Congressional Caucus about US support for Ugandan homophobia Human Rights Watch Retrieved August 8 2015 Uganda State Homophobia Threatens Health and Human Rights Human Rights Watch August 22 2007 Retrieved August 8 2015 Long Scott August 23 2007 Letter from Human Rights Watch to Ugandan President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni Regarding Homophobia and HIV PDF Human Rights Watch Retrieved August 8 2015 Ssempa Martin September 4 2007 Homosexuality is against our culture New Vision Uganda Archived from the original on March 19 2015 Retrieved August 8 2015 a b Uganda Anti Homosexuality Bill Threatens Liberties and Human Rights Defenders Sexual Minorities Uganda SMUG Amnesty International Human Rights Watch International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission World AIDS Campaign October 9 2009 Retrieved August 8 2015 Long Scott Stern Jessica Francoeur Adam May 2006 Family Unvalued Discrimination Denial and the Fate of Binantional Same Sex Couples Under US Law Human Rights Watch and Immigration Equality 2006 Retrieved July 15 2015 Gupta Alok Long Scott 17 December 2008 This Alien Legacy The Origins of Sodomy Laws in British Colonialism Human Rights Watch 2008 Retrieved July 15 2015 Sanei Faraz 15 December 2010 We Are a Buried Generation Discrimination and Violence Against Sexual Minorities in Iran Human Rights Watch 2010 Retrieved July 31 2015 Stern Jessica Long Scott 6 October 2008 These Everyday Humiliations Violence Against Lesbians Bisexual Women and Transgender Men in Kyrgyzstan Human Rights Watch 2008 Retrieved July 31 2015 Cano Nieto Juliana Long Scott 21 May 2008 We Need a Law for Liberation Gender Sexuality and Human Rights in a Changing Turkey Human Rights Watch 2008 Retrieved July 31 2015 Cano Nieto Juliana 29 May 2009 Not Worth a Penny Human Rights Abuses Against Transgender People in Honduras Human Rights Watch 2009 Retrieved July 31 2015 Moumneh Rasha 15 January 2012 They Hunt Us Down for Fun Discrimination and Police Violence Against Transgender Women in Kuwait Human Rights Watch 2012 Retrieved July 31 2015 a b McAllester Matt October 12 2009 The Hunted How A Few New Yorkers Are Trying to Save the Hunted Gay Men of Iraq New York Magazine Retrieved July 27 2015 Scott Long 17 August 2009 They Want us Exterminated Murder Torture Sexual Orientation and Gender in Iraq Human Rights Watch 2009 Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott March 9 2012 Graphic pictures from Iraq s anti Emo killing campaign A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott March 8 2012 Gay killings emos and Iraq What s going on A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott March 8 2012 Iraq and the Emo killings A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott March 9 2012 The Emo killings in Iraq The police and their smoking gun A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott March 25 2012 A war against me inside and outside Security forces denials and emos in Iraq A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott March 21 2012 You are killing the nation not emos more from Iraq A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Long Scott March 16 2012 Death and life in Iraq Obama death cabs vampires Ministries and murder A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 15 2015 Healy Jack March 11 2012 Threats and Killings Striking Fear Among Young Iraqis Including Gays The New York Times Retrieved July 30 2015 Long Scott March 18 2012 Massacre of Emos in Iraq Goes to Core of a Damaged Society The Guardian Retrieved July 30 2015 Long Scott February 11 2015 ISIS Kills Gays A History of Violence Jadaliyya Retrieved July 30 2015 Massad Joseph 2012 Desiring Arabs University of Chicago Press 2007 ed pp 174 188 ISBN 9780226509587 Long Scott July 20 2015 Gay hanging in Iran Atrocities and impersonations A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved August 1 2015 Andriette Bill October 2005 Pictures At An Execution The Guide archived at williamapercy com Retrieved July 22 2015 Schindler Paul March 27 2008 Scott Long s Troubling Style of Advocacy Gay City News Archived from the original on September 21 2008 Retrieved April 22 2009 Long Scott March 2009 Unbearable Witness How Western Activists Mis Recognize Sexuality in Iran Contemporary Politics 5 1 119 136 doi 10 1080 13569770802698054 Human Rights Watch apologises to Peter Tatchell PinkNews 2 July 2010 Archived from the original on 15 January 2016 Peter Tatchell an apology and correction Contemporary Politics 18 3 269 2012 doi 10 1080 13569775 2012 704201 ISSN 1356 9775 S2CID 218543774 Peter Tatchell receives apology from UK publisher PinkNews 27 November 2012 Archived from the original on 12 December 2015 Routledge apologises to Peter Tatchell Archived from the original on 25 February 2016 Otto Dianne 2013 Transnational Homo Assemblages Reading Gender in Counter terrorism Discourses Jindal Global Law Review 4 2 Long Scott February 19 2015 Help I m being persecuted Hypocrisy and free speech A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 30 2015 Duffy Nick 22 Feb 2016 Academics and activists condemn bully Peter Tatchell in open letter PinkNews Retrieved June 3 2021 I never made any legal threats against Human Rights Watch Rothe Johanna October 15 2009 Out of Place Out of Print On the Censorship of the First Queerness Raciality Collection in Britain Monthly Review Retrieved August 10 2015 On the censorship of Gay Imperialism and Out of Place XTalk Project October 17 2009 Retrieved August 10 2015 Douglas Stacy September 2009 On Defending Raw Nerve Books Or The Stuff of Good Feeling Upping the Anti Retrieved August 10 2015 Open Letter on Peter Tatchell Censorship and Criticism AlanaLentin Net February 22 2016 Retrieved March 16 2016 a b Scott Long Gspottt T amp T s Triggersite for Sogi Passion amp Advocacy August 24 2010 Retrieved July 31 2015 a b Londono Ernesto October 6 2014 The Crackdown on Gay Men in Egypt The New York Times Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott October 14 2013 New arrests for homosexuality in Egypt A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott November 11 2013 Military manhood More arrests for homosexual conduct in Egypt A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Mezzofiore Gianluca October 14 2013 Egypt Police Arrest 14 at Health Centre for Practising Homosexuality International Business Times Retrieved August 13 2015 Long Scott January 19 2015 Why the crackdown in Egypt isn t over and what to do about it A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott May 16 2014 Brutal gender crackdown in Egypt The tomorrows that never came A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott October 17 2014 اسئلة قانونية بخصوص المثلية في مصر A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Morgan Marwa October 30 2014 Activists Launch Legal Guide for Homosexuals in Egypt Guide Discusses Violations Against Homosexuals by the Police Employers and People in Public Places Daily News Egypt Retrieved August 13 2015 Long Scott September 28 2014 ما لا تعرفه عن بلو كوت وسي إيجيبت قصة مراقبة الإنترنت في مصر Zahma com Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott 12 June 2015 الشرطة المصرية تلاحق المجتمع المثلي Internet entrapment in Egypt Protect yourself A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott September 25 2014 Meet the Businessmen Who Want Egypt s Internet Users Jailed Tortured and Killed A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott September 22 2014 Egypt Tweet and blog against homophobic brutality September 24 and 25 A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved July 31 2015 Long Scott May 17 2015 Tweet for Egypt on IDAHOT Why it s important A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved August 11 2015 Long Scott December 8 2014 Dozens arrested for perversion in a huge raid in Cairo A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved August 11 2015 Long Scott January 12 2015 Victory A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved August 11 2015 Kingsley Patrick January 12 2015 Cairo Men Cleared of Bathhouse Debauchery The Guardian Retrieved August 11 2015 Feder J Lester September 23 2014 LGBT Egyptians Go Into Hiding As Regime Cracks Down BuzzFeed Retrieved August 11 2015 Dean Laura June 14 2015 Transgender People Are At the Center of a Brutal Crackdown on LGBT Egyptians Global Post Retrieved August 11 2015 Carr Sarah November 25 2013 Of Moral Panics and State Security Nationalist Fervor and Gay Men Mada Masr Retrieved August 13 2015 Magid Pesha November 4 2014 الأخلاق سلاح الدولة في مواجهة المثليين حملة جديدة على المصريين أصحاب الميول الجنسية المختلفة والمتحولين جنسي ا في إطار الموجة المحافظة التي تقودها الدولة Mada Masr Retrieved August 11 2015 Magid Pesha June 4 2015 ماذا يعني أن تكون متحول ا جنسي ا في مصر Mada Masr Retrieved August 11 2015 Long Scott March 11 2015 Western Governments Should Demand Egypt Stop Its Murderous Repression Irish Times Retrieved August 11 2015 Long Scott Youssef Ramy March 11 2015 Op Ed John Kerry Needs to Do the Right Thing in Egypt The Advocate Retrieved August 11 2015 Long Scott April 18 2015 Deport me A Paper Bird Sex Rights and the World Retrieved August 11 2015 Metropolitan Community Church Honors Human Rights Watch Award Recognizes Groundbreaking Work on LGBT Rights Human Rights Watch June 28 2007 Retrieved August 8 2015 External links editHuman Rights Watch Main Page International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission a paper bird Long s personal blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scott Long amp oldid 1205056948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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