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Wikipedia

Transgender rights movement

The transgender rights movement is a movement to promote the legal status of transgender people and to eliminate discrimination and violence against transgender people regarding housing, employment, public accommodations, education, and health care. A major goal of transgender activism is to allow changes to identification documents to conform with a person's current gender identity without the need for gender-affirming surgery or any medical requirements, which is known as gender self-identification.[1][2][3] It is part of the broader LGBT rights movements.

Pride in London, 3 July 2010. The banner the crowd is holding up reads: "Respect and Equality for ALL Trans People. Press for Change"
Madrid Pride 2016. The banner the crowd is holding together reads: "We choose our bodies, we conquer our rights"

History

Identifying the boundaries of a trans movement has been a matter of some debate. Conventionally, evidence of a codified political identity emerges in 1952, when Virginia Prince, a trans woman, along with others, launched Transvestia: The Journal of the American Society for Equality in Dress. This publication is considered by some to be the beginning of the transgender rights movement in the United States, however it would be many years before the term "transgender", itself, would come into common usages.[4]

In the years before the Stonewall riots, other actions for LGBT rights had taken place.

An early, but not widely known, action is the Cooper Do-nuts Riot of 1959 that took place in Downtown Los Angeles,[5] when drag queens, lesbians, gay men, and transgender people who hung out at Cooper Do-nuts and who were frequently harassed by the LAPD fought back after police arrested three people, including John Rechy. Patrons began pelting the police with donuts and coffee cups. The LAPD called for backup and arrested several rioters. Rechy and the other two original detainees were able to escape.[6]

In August 1966 the Compton's Cafeteria riot occurred in the Tenderloin district of San Francisco. This incident was one of the first recorded LGBT-related riots in United States history.[6] In an incident similar to Cooper's, drag queens, prostitutes, and trans people fought back against police harassment. When a transgender woman resisted arrest by throwing coffee at a police officer, drag queens poured into the streets, fighting back with their high heels and heavy bags.[7] The next night, the regular patrons were joined by street hustlers, Tenderloin street people, and other members of the LGBT community in their stand against police violence.[8] It marked the beginning of trans activism in San Francisco.[9]

In 1969, the year of the Stonewall riots, the term transgender was not yet in use. But gender nonconforming people like drag king Stormé DeLarverie, and self-identified "street queen" Marsha P. Johnson were in the vanguard of the riots, with DeLarverie widely believed to be the person whose struggle with the police was the spark that set the crowd to fight back.[10][11] Witnesses to the uprising also place early trans activists and members of the Gay Liberation Front, Zazu Nova and Jackie Hormona along with Johnson, as combatants "in the vanguard" of the pushback against the police on the multiple nights of the rebellion.[12]

Marsha P. Johnson later went on to co-found Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR) with a close friend, Sylvia Rivera. Rivera's early definitions around trans were very broad, including all gender-nonconforming people.[13] Rivera continued to be an advocate for trans rights, and inclusion of protection for trans people in all LGBT rights legislation, until her death in 2002.[14]

In the 1980s female to male (FTM) transsexuality became more broadly known.[15]

In 1992 Leslie Feinberg printed and circulated a pamphlet titled "Transgender Liberation: A Movement Whose Time Has Come". Feinberg's pamphlet begins by calling on the trans community to compose their definitions, invoking language as a tool that unites people divided by oppression. From here, Feinberg traces the emergence of oppression imposed by the ruling class using institutions. These institutions, run by the elite, enforce a gender binary at the expense of communal societies that encouraged liberal gender expression. Women were devalued and effeminacy was disparaged to promote patriarchal economic privilege. According to Feinberg, the gender binary is a contrivance of Western civilization. Having acknowledged this, Feinberg encourages all humans to reclaim the natural continuum of gender expression that identifies trans individuals as sacred. Feinberg concludes by empowering the working class to liberate themselves from the ruling class, which can be achieved by directing the labor of marginalized groups towards the common goal of revolution.[16]

During the early 1990s, travesti activism took off in Argentina, which established itself within the broader national LGBT movement as among the groups with the longest trajectory and impact.[17][18]

In 1993, Adela Vázquez, a Latina transgender woman, protested in San Francisco over the government removing the transgender community from the workforce because they labeled them disabled.[19] However, that situation is making some progress and is changing. In 2014, per The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force record, only 17 states (and the District of Columbia) in the United States of America have laws that protect individuals in the transgender community, which equals to about 45%. States that present these protections are: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin.[20] Furthermore, there are organizations that are working to increase the numbers of States having these laws like: The Transgender, Gender Variant and Intersex Justice Project; The Transgender Law Center; and the National Center for Transgender Equality.[20]

On December 31, 1993, a trans man named Brandon Teena was murdered in Nebraska along with two of his friends. This murder was documented in the 1999 movie Boys Don't Cry starring Hilary Swank as Brandon Teena.[15]

With the publication of 1996's Transgender Warriors, Leslie Feinberg brought the word "transgender" more fully into use. Like Rivera, Feinberg also defined "transgender" very broadly, including drag queens and gender-nonconforming people from history. A dedicated communist, Feinberg included an analysis of many who are oppressed by the apparatus of capitalism.[21]

Transgender Day of Remembrance, an annual day of remembrance to commemorate those murdered in transphobic hate crimes founded by transgender advocate, Gwendolyn Ann Smith, was first held in 1999 following the murder of Rita Hester in 1998.[22][23] The "Remembering our Dead" web project was also set up in 1999.[24]

In June 2012 CeCe McDonald was wrongfully imprisoned for having defended herself against Neo-Nazi attackers with a pair of scissors, which resulted in the death of one of her assailants. Her story was publicized by a GLAAD Media Award winning article in Ebony.com. Laverne Cox, openly trans actress on Orange Is the New Black, launched a campaign to raise the consciousness of cruel prison conditions for incarcerated trans individuals and rallied to free CeCe. After serving 19 months, she was released in January 2014.[citation needed]

 
Left OUT Party. Two signs reflecting some of the individuals protesting.

On March 26–27, 2013, LGBT activists gathered at the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., to support marriage equality, but amid these demonstrations, one speaker was asked to edit their proceedings to conceal their trans identity, and the trans community was asked to lower their pride flags. This incident follows years of tension between activist groups, namely Human Rights Campaign and the trans community because the trans community is often neglected or blatantly excluded from events and political consideration. The incident resulted in a backlash and public criticism by the trans community. In response, activist groups apologized for the incident, and in 2014 HRC promised to energize efforts for promoting trans rights.[citation needed]

In Florida in March 2015, Representative Frank Artiles (R-Miami) proposed House Bill 583, which would ensure that individuals who enter public facilities such as bathrooms or locker rooms designated for those who are of the "other biological sex" could be jailed for up to 60 days. Artiles claims that it was proposed for the sake of public safety.[25]

In September 2017, the Botswana High Court ruled that the refusal of the Registrar of National Registration to change a transgender man's gender marker was "unreasonable and violated his constitutional rights to dignity, privacy, freedom of expression, equal protection of the law, freedom from discrimination and freedom from inhumane and degrading treatment". LGBT activists celebrated the ruling, describing it as a great victory.[26][27] At first, the Botswana Government announced it would appeal the ruling, but decided against it in December, supplying the trans man with a new identity document that reflects his gender identity.[28]

A similar case, where a transgender woman sought to change her gender marker to female, was heard in December 2017. The High Court ruled that the Government must recognize her gender identity. She dedicated her victory to "every single trans diverse person in Botswana".[29]

In 2023 trans rights protesters occupied the Oklahoma state capital after passage of Senate Bill 129[30]

Issues of concern

Legislation regarding usage of public restrooms

 
Texan protest outside senate committee against bathroom bill (March 2017)

In the United States, the "bathroom bill" issue first came to public attention in 2013 when the Colorado Civil Rights Division ruled in favor of transgender six-year-old student Coy Mathis' right to use the girls' toilet at her elementary school in Fountain, Colorado.[31] The case, along with Mathis and her family, was again brought to public attention with the 2016 release of the documentary Growing Up Coy.[32]

In the wake of the Mathis case, numerous states have put forth or passed legislation which obligates transgender people to use the public bathroom corresponding to their sex as assigned at birth.[33] As of July 2017, sixteen states had considered such bills and one state, North Carolina, passed its bill into law. The North Carolina House Bill 2, or HB2, was passed into law in February 2017.[33] HB2 quickly garnered attention as the first law of its kind and sparked high-profile condemnation, including cancellations of concerts and sporting events by Bruce Springsteen and the NCAA.[34] In the midst of the controversy and the inauguration of a new governor of North Carolina, the bill was repealed by the state legislature on March 30, 2017.[34]

Education

 
Kill bigot bill protest in Australia (February 2022)

The treatment of transgender people in educational environments has often been a focal point of the movement's concern. In a survey of Canadian high schools conducted between 2007 and 2009, 74% of students who identified themselves as transgender reported having experienced verbal harassment over their gender expression, 37% reported physical harassment over their gender expression, and 49% of trans students reported at least one instance of sexual harassment within the last school year.[35]

In 2013, Smith College, an all women liberal arts US college gained notoriety for denying admission to Calliope Wong, a transgender woman.[36] Following the incident, the college's administration and student activists engaged in a protracted battle around transgender women's rights. The first women's college in the United States to open admission to transgender women was Mills College in the year of 2014[37] followed closely behind by Mount Holyoke in the same year.[38] After Mills and Mount Holyoke, Simmons University, Scripps College, Bryn Mawr and Wellesley changed their policy to accept transgender students. Smith College and Barnard College were the last US women's colleges to change their policies to admit transgender students effective on May and June 2015, respectively.[39] Student activists at US women's colleges are credited for the introduction of more inclusionary policies allowing admission of trans women in spaces which historically have excluded them. Mount Holyoke remains gender-inclusive, admitting not only transgender women but also transgender men and non-binary people under its all-persons-but-cisgender-men policy.[39]

Statistics of oppression

In a survey conducted by National Center for Transgender Equality and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, called "Injustice at Every Turn: A Report of the National Transgender Discrimination Survey", respondents reported that 90% of them had experienced discrimination and harassment in the work place and at school. The trans community experiences rates of unemployment that are double the national average. Additionally, one out of every twelve trans women, and one out of every eight trans women of color, are physically attacked or assaulted in public.[40][failed verification]

Health care

In 2021 Alabama introduced house bill 1 the Vulnerable Child Compassion and Protection Act make it a felony for doctors to prescribe hormone blockers, delay or prevent puberty, and hormone replacement therapy (HRT).[41] Arkansas introduced and passed HB1570 the Save Adolescents from Experimentation (SAFE) act.[42] The SAFE act prohibits doctors from treating anyone under the age of 18 with gender-affirming care. North Carolina SB 514[43] and Oklahoma SB 676[44] implement similar medical bans as the previous bills but extend the age restriction to anyone under 21. In 2021, 33 states have introduced bills targeted at transgender individuals with the majority of them being similar to previous listed bills, these bills are aimed to limit access to healthcare for transgender individuals and youth.[45]

People of color

 
Black trans lives matter poster in Springfield, Oregon (July 2020)

Transgender people of color often face an identity that is under speculation, suspicion, doubt, and policing. Those within the trans community are often left out from the wealthy, able-bodied, American, and white experience that those in the non-trans community often focus on, and are subject to discrimination as a transgender person and as a person of color.[46] The focus of the realms of trans visibility in pop culture and trans organizations has mostly been on white people.[47]

Historically, this is in part due to the rejection of an individual by family members at a young age. "The majority of transgender women of color", say Juline A. Koken, David S. Bimbi, and Jeffrey T. Parsons, "experience verbal and physical abuse at the hands of their family members upon disclosing their transgender identity."[48]

As transgender women of color face both gender and racial discrimination, their experiences may be qualitatively different from white transgender women. African-American and Latino families are deeply rooted in religious tradition, which may lead to more socially conservative and rigid ideas about gender roles, homosexuality, and traditionalism. In addition, parents also worry that their children will face additional hardships as members of double minorities.[48]

Some of the ways white transgender people have more privilege than those of their non-white counterparts include racialized violence, better pay, better representation and benefits from the mainstream media movement.[citation needed] According to a National Transgender Discrimination survey, the combination of anti-transgender bias and individual racism results in transgender people of color being 6 times more likely to experience physical violence when interacting with the police compared to cisgender White people, two-thirds of LGBT homicide victims being transgender women of color, and a startling 78% attempt suicide.[49][50] Of the 17 homicides of trans and gender-nonconforming people in 2017 that the project has counted so far, 16 had been people of color; 15 had been transgender women; and 13 had been black transgender women.[51] The NCAVP survey also found that trans survivors were 1.7 times more likely to be the victims of sexual violence than cisgender survivors. Transgender/non-conforming individuals also reported over four times the national average of HIV infection (2.64% compared to 0.6%, respectively) with rates for transgender women (3.76%) and those who are unemployed (4.67%) being even higher.[52] Black transgender people were affected by HIV even more so than these averages; 20.23% of transgender individuals with HIV are black.[53] According to the National Transgender Discrimination Survey, 41% of respondents reported attempting suicide compared to 1.6% of the general population with unemployment, low income, and assault (both sexual and physical) raising the risk factors.[52]

The social stigma of being transgender is a cause for poor health care, which manifests into other areas of transgender people. Social determinants of health, including violence and discrimination, may result in negative personal psychological and physiological effects.[citation needed] The access to proper health care is essential in both the transitioning and resilience. In a study of resilience of transgender people of color, Jay, a 41-year-old FTM POC, stated he "had no place to turn to get help in transition—and worked five jobs trying to save money for surgery that [he] never knew if [he] would be able to afford."[54] Another key factor to the resilience to opposition of transgender POC involved having a strong sense of pride in both ethnic and gender identities. Developing this sense of pride can be a process, which involves overcoming barriers such as transphobia and racism. However, once these barriers are in fact crossed, transgender POC can start to see themselves in a better light and use their inner strength and confidence to be more persistent, optimistic, and positivity-oriented.

In recent years, there have been several housing crises among transgender people, especially transgender people of color. According to a 2016 Gallup poll, 10.052 million people in the United States identify as lesbian, gay, or transgender, and millennials, or those born between 1980 and 1998, drive virtually all of all of the increases overall LGBT self-identification.[55] As the millennial generation has entered the college age, trans individuals have seen difficulty in securing basic housing rights and needs. There is a definite predominance of sex-segregated bathrooms, locker rooms, and housing where transgender people regularly are denied access, and are harassed and challenged for their gender identity.[56] Most universities operate on the premise that gender is binary and static, and this can be especially problematic with either poorer transgender individuals or transgender people of color, since 55% of college students in the United States are white[57] and the average income for families with college students is $74,000 – 60% higher than the national average of $46,326.[58]

Poverty

Black transgender people live in extreme poverty with 34% reporting a household income of less than $10,000 a year, which is more than twice the rate for transgender people of all races (15%), four times the black population (9%), and eight times the U.S. population (4%).[53] Transgender people of color are more likely to be poor, be homeless, or lack a college degree.[47] Multiple factors pile up on each other that force many transgender people of color to be homeless; for instance, many individuals are involved in abusive relationships or live in crime-ridden neighborhoods because of the difficulty finding employment as a transgender person and/or experiencing job loss due to transphobia in the work place.[54] Those with greater socioeconomic status might use their social connections to advocate for access to appropriate housing for transgender students in ways that are not possible for most lower-income families; one proposal comes from the Administration for Children and Families, which issued the largest-ever LGBT focused federal grant to develop a model program to support LGBT foster youth and prevent them from being homeless.[59]

Transmisogyny

Trans people experience a disproportionately large number of hate crimes, with trans women experiencing the majority of these crimes. In fact, over half of all anti-LGBTQIA+ homicides were perpetrated against transgender women.[60] Transgender women face harsher levels of discrimination than other transgender people. A study on workplace experiences after people receive sex changes found that trans women, on average, lose almost one third of their salary (see Gender pay gap in the United States), are respected less, and receive more harassment. At the same time, trans men often experience salary raises and greater authority in the workplace.[61]

The experiences trans men face are vastly different from those of trans women; trans men who were raised as female were treated differently as soon as they came out as male. They gained professional experience, but lost intimacy; exuded authority, but caused fear.[62] Cultural sexism is evident towards trans men because it is easier to be "low-disclosure" than trans women.[62] They are usually not recognized as trans, which is known as passing, and it avoids transphobia and discrimination by others. "Women's appearances get more attention," says Julia Serano, a transfeminist, "and women's actions are commented on and critiqued more than men, so [it] just makes sense that people will focus more on trans women than trans men."[62]

Definition of gender

 
New Hampshire, U.S., January 2019

In 2018, over 2,600 scientists signed an open letter in opposition to Trump administration plans to legally define gender as a binary condition determined at birth, based on genitalia, including plans to clarify disputes using "genetic testing," stating, with emphasis, "This proposal is fundamentally inconsistent not only with science, but also with ethical practices, human rights, and basic dignity."[63] Mika Tosca, an assistant professor of climate science at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, told BuzzFeed News, "As a trans woman and as a scientist, [the Trump administration proposal is] inherently an attack on my humanity, my ability to exist in the world, and to safely navigate certain spaces," and "It was really important that we gather as many scientists as we could to say that so scientists ourselves were not complicit in promoting this wholly flawed nonscientific effort."[64] The New York Times wrote that the Trump administration proposal, if implemented, "would be acutely felt in schools and their most visible battlegrounds: locker rooms and bathrooms."[65]

Organizations

International organizations such as GATE, and World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) work specifically towards transgender rights. Other national level organizations also work for transgender rights, such as: in the United States, the National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE), GenderPAC, Sylvia Rivera Law Project, the Transgender Law Center, and in the U.K., The Gender Trust, Trans Media Watch, and Press for Change.

Religions

Reform Judaism

In 2015, the American Union for Reform Judaism adopted a Resolution on the Rights of Transgender and Gender Non-Conforming People, urging clergy and synagogue attendants to actively promote tolerance and inclusion of such individuals.[66]

In popular culture

Major events

Carey Purcell states that these moments have been key to bringing awareness to the transgender movement and fight for transgender rights.[67]

Representation in media

Representation in pop culture has major effects on both the transgender and cisgender communities. In addition to the above list, Wendy Carlos, synthesizer player and recording artist, in 1979 announced that she had been living at least 11 years as a woman, and that she had undergone reassignment surgery. Elizabeth Tisdell and Patricia Thompson conducted a study on the effects of representation in the media on teachers and its effect on the way they teach in the classroom. This study found that when teachers had been exposed to programming that featured diverse characters in a positive light, teachers were more open to teaching their students in a more open, accepting way.[82] In this study, the authors found that media reinforces the values of the dominant culture, and is one of the most powerful ways to informally educate people.[82] Tisdell and Thompson state that this representation is a way in which people construct ideas of themselves and others, and that more representation lends legitimacy to identities and movements such as the transgender movement.

In a separate study, GLAAD looked at the representation of transgender characters in the media over the last ten years.[83] After examining many different episodes and storylines, GLAAD found that transgender characters were cast in a "victim" role in 40% of the catalogued episodes, and were cast as killers or victims in 21% of the episodes.[83] They also found that the most common profession of transgender characters in the episodes was sex workers, seen in about 20% of the episodes.[83] In addition to the representation of transgender characters, the authors found that anti-transgender slurs, language, and dialogue were present in at least 61% of the episodes.[83]

Activists within the transgender rights movement argue that representation such as these set the movement back in gaining understanding within mainstream society. Jayce Montgomery is a trans man who argues that these types of representation "always displaying [transgender people] in the stereotypical way. You know, 'masculine,' [or] this is the man/this is the woman role. And not really delving into their background and what they actually go through."[84] In the same conversation, Stacey Rice goes on in the same conversation with Bitch Media to make the point that well known transgender celebrities are not representative of the general transgender community's experiences.[84] Rice then goes on to say that while these celebrities are not representative of the average transgender person's experience, the visibility they bring to the transgender rights movement does nothing but help the cause.[84]

Personalities

Many celebrities have spoken out in support of transgender rights and often in conjunction with overall support for the LGBTQ community. Numerous celebrities voice such support for the Human Rights Campaign, including Archie Panjabi, Lance Bass, Tituss Burgess, Chelsea Clinton, George Clooney, Tim Cook, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Sally Field, Lady Gaga, Whoopi Goldberg, Anne Hathaway, Jennifer Hudson, Caitlyn Jenner, Jazz Jennings, Elton John, Cyndi Lauper, Jennifer Lopez, Demi Lovato, Natasha Lyonne, Elliot Page, Brad Pitt, Geena Rocero, Bruce Springsteen, Jeffrey Tambor, Charlize Theron, Miley Cyrus, and Lana Wachowski.[85][86][87][88]

Magnus Hirschfeld was a German physician and advocate for sexual minorities. Much of his medical research was on sexuality, specifically homosexuality. He was one of the earliest to suggest that homosexuality was innate. Along with Max Spohr, Franz Josef von Bülow, and Eduard Oberg, he founded the Scientific-Humanitarian Committee in 1897, which is considered to be the first gay rights organization.[89] Hirschfield also established the Institute for Sexual Research, which would go on to perform the first modern vaginoplasties by 1930. Unfortunately, most of his books and research were burned by the Nazis.[90]

In the same vein, Harry Benjamin German-American sexologist, author of The Transsexual Phenomenon was a supporter of transgender rights and helped establish the medical procedures and Standards of Care for transgender persons in the United States.

Laverne Cox

Orange Is the New Black actress Laverne Cox has been particularly outspoken about the importance of transgender rights. Being transgender herself, Cox has experienced firsthand the issues that surround those who are transgender and often uses her own story to promote the movement for transgender rights.[91] She sees her fame as an opportunity to bring awareness to causes that matter and that her unique position legitimizes the transgender rights movement.[92] Particularly, she believes that transgender individuals have been historically overlooked and sidelined not just socially, but in the fight for civil rights as well.[93] Cox acknowledges the progress that has been made for Gay rights, but that it is important to focus on transgender rights separately, seeing as it has historically been grouped together with other causes and used as an umbrella term.[94] In 2014, Glamour magazine named Cox Woman of the Year in recognition of her activism.[95]

Caitlyn Jenner

In April 2015, Olympic gold medalist and reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner came out as transgender.[96] The news had been speculated for months leading up to the announcement, but still shocked the public and received considerable attention.[97] Jenner expressed the desire to transition and to be known as Caitlyn Jenner and introduced herself for the first time on the cover of Vanity Fair.[98] Jenner's transition has been documented by the short-lived reality television series titled I am Cait.[99] Jenner was determined to make a difference and bring awareness to transgender rights, believing that telling her story can do so. Jenner did increase transgender visibility, however, her commentary and series were criticized for misrepresenting the struggles of the majority the trans community, who are much less privileged than her and face deeper problems.[100]

Jenner has been sharply criticized by many activists in the transgender rights movement for stating in an interview with TMZ that trans girls should not be allowed to compete in girls' sports at school, backing Republican Party views on transgender people in sports.[20] Her comments lead to criticism amongst the trans and broader LGBTQ+ community; some advocates have questioned Jenner's status as a trans activist, saying that "[Jenner] did not represent the broader LGBT community".[101][102]

Janet Mock

Janet Mock is an author, activist, and TV show host who advocates transgender rights, sex workers' rights, and more among marginalized communities.[103][104][105] Mock uses storytelling as a way to diminish stigma of marginalized communities.[105] She has authored and edited many works addressing her personal struggles as well as exploring various social issues affecting various communities.[105] Mock acknowledged in an interview that her experience alone does not speak for all in the transgender community, but it can provide a platform for some to reflect upon.[106] She addressed and encouraged intersectionality and inclusiveness in the feminist movement at the 2017 Women's March.[105][104][103][107]

Notable transgender activists

A list of notable transgender activists, listed in alphabetical order by surname.

  • Tamara Adrián, the first openly transgender woman to be elected to office in Venezuela.
  • Donnie Anderson, American Baptist minister and LGBTQ activist who is a transgender woman[108]
  • Carla Antonelli, Spanish actress and politician who was the first openly transgender person to participate in Spain's legislature.[109]
  • Jenny Bailey, Cambridge, UK mayor who is also married to a transgender partner.[110]
  • Georgina Beyer, former New Zealand politician who was the first openly transgender mayor and the first transgender politician to become member of Parliament in the world.[111]
  • Elie Che, British model and trans activist; she became an international cultural focus due to her early death.[112]
  • Anna Grodzdka, a Polish politician and the first openly transgender person to be elected as an MP in Europe.[113]
  • Jamie Lee Hamilton, the first transgender person who ran for office in Canada.[114]
  • Kim Coco Iwamoto, Hawaii's Civil Rights Commissioner and former member of the Board of Education.[115]
  • Aya Kamikawa and Tomoya Hosoda, Japan's first openly transgender politicians.[116]
  • Kit Malone, transgender rights activist and educator in Indiana.
  • Shabnam Mausi, the first transgender person in India to be elected for public office.[117][118]
  • Sarah McBride, Delaware State Senator from Senate District 1, is the first openly transgender person elected to any state Senate in the United States in 2020.
  • Micheline Montreuil, Canadian politician, lawyer, and transgender rights activist.
  • Luisa Revilla Urcia, the first openly transgender woman to be elected to office in Uruguay.[119]
  • Geraldine Roman, the first openly transgender woman to be elected to Congress in the Philippines.[120]
  • Lauren Scott, US LGBTQ activist who ran for Nevada Assembly as a Republican.[121]
  • Amanda Simpson, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Operational Energy and the highest ranking openly transgender appointee in the United States.[122]
  • Nikki Sinclaire, former member of the European Parliament.[123]
  • Michelle Suaréz, the first openly transgender woman to be elected to office in Uruguay.
  • Brianna Titone, Colorado State Representative from HD27, is the first openly transgender person elected in 2018 and reelected in 2020.
  • Brianna Westbrook, a US democratic socialist politician and Vice Chair of the Arizona Democratic Party.[124]

See also

References

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transgender, rights, movement, transgender, rights, movement, movement, promote, legal, status, transgender, people, eliminate, discrimination, violence, against, transgender, people, regarding, housing, employment, public, accommodations, education, health, c. The transgender rights movement is a movement to promote the legal status of transgender people and to eliminate discrimination and violence against transgender people regarding housing employment public accommodations education and health care A major goal of transgender activism is to allow changes to identification documents to conform with a person s current gender identity without the need for gender affirming surgery or any medical requirements which is known as gender self identification 1 2 3 It is part of the broader LGBT rights movements Pride in London 3 July 2010 The banner the crowd is holding up reads Respect and Equality for ALL Trans People Press for Change Madrid Pride 2016 The banner the crowd is holding together reads We choose our bodies we conquer our rights Contents 1 History 2 Issues of concern 2 1 Legislation regarding usage of public restrooms 2 2 Education 2 3 Statistics of oppression 2 4 Health care 2 5 People of color 2 6 Poverty 2 7 Transmisogyny 2 8 Definition of gender 3 Organizations 4 Religions 4 1 Reform Judaism 5 In popular culture 5 1 Major events 5 2 Representation in media 5 3 Personalities 5 3 1 Laverne Cox 5 3 2 Caitlyn Jenner 5 3 3 Janet Mock 6 Notable transgender activists 7 See also 8 ReferencesHistoryIdentifying the boundaries of a trans movement has been a matter of some debate Conventionally evidence of a codified political identity emerges in 1952 when Virginia Prince a trans woman along with others launched Transvestia The Journal of the American Society for Equality in Dress This publication is considered by some to be the beginning of the transgender rights movement in the United States however it would be many years before the term transgender itself would come into common usages 4 In the years before the Stonewall riots other actions for LGBT rights had taken place An early but not widely known action is the Cooper Do nuts Riot of 1959 that took place in Downtown Los Angeles 5 when drag queens lesbians gay men and transgender people who hung out at Cooper Do nuts and who were frequently harassed by the LAPD fought back after police arrested three people including John Rechy Patrons began pelting the police with donuts and coffee cups The LAPD called for backup and arrested several rioters Rechy and the other two original detainees were able to escape 6 In August 1966 the Compton s Cafeteria riot occurred in the Tenderloin district of San Francisco This incident was one of the first recorded LGBT related riots in United States history 6 In an incident similar to Cooper s drag queens prostitutes and trans people fought back against police harassment When a transgender woman resisted arrest by throwing coffee at a police officer drag queens poured into the streets fighting back with their high heels and heavy bags 7 The next night the regular patrons were joined by street hustlers Tenderloin street people and other members of the LGBT community in their stand against police violence 8 It marked the beginning of trans activism in San Francisco 9 In 1969 the year of the Stonewall riots the term transgender was not yet in use But gender nonconforming people like drag king Storme DeLarverie and self identified street queen Marsha P Johnson were in the vanguard of the riots with DeLarverie widely believed to be the person whose struggle with the police was the spark that set the crowd to fight back 10 11 Witnesses to the uprising also place early trans activists and members of the Gay Liberation Front Zazu Nova and Jackie Hormona along with Johnson as combatants in the vanguard of the pushback against the police on the multiple nights of the rebellion 12 Marsha P Johnson later went on to co found Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries STAR with a close friend Sylvia Rivera Rivera s early definitions around trans were very broad including all gender nonconforming people 13 Rivera continued to be an advocate for trans rights and inclusion of protection for trans people in all LGBT rights legislation until her death in 2002 14 In the 1980s female to male FTM transsexuality became more broadly known 15 In 1992 Leslie Feinberg printed and circulated a pamphlet titled Transgender Liberation A Movement Whose Time Has Come Feinberg s pamphlet begins by calling on the trans community to compose their definitions invoking language as a tool that unites people divided by oppression From here Feinberg traces the emergence of oppression imposed by the ruling class using institutions These institutions run by the elite enforce a gender binary at the expense of communal societies that encouraged liberal gender expression Women were devalued and effeminacy was disparaged to promote patriarchal economic privilege According to Feinberg the gender binary is a contrivance of Western civilization Having acknowledged this Feinberg encourages all humans to reclaim the natural continuum of gender expression that identifies trans individuals as sacred Feinberg concludes by empowering the working class to liberate themselves from the ruling class which can be achieved by directing the labor of marginalized groups towards the common goal of revolution 16 During the early 1990s travesti activism took off in Argentina which established itself within the broader national LGBT movement as among the groups with the longest trajectory and impact 17 18 In 1993 Adela Vazquez a Latina transgender woman protested in San Francisco over the government removing the transgender community from the workforce because they labeled them disabled 19 However that situation is making some progress and is changing In 2014 per The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force record only 17 states and the District of Columbia in the United States of America have laws that protect individuals in the transgender community which equals to about 45 States that present these protections are California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Hawaii Illinois Iowa Maine Massachusetts Minnesota New Jersey New Mexico Nevada Oregon Rhode Island Vermont Washington and Wisconsin 20 Furthermore there are organizations that are working to increase the numbers of States having these laws like The Transgender Gender Variant and Intersex Justice Project The Transgender Law Center and the National Center for Transgender Equality 20 On December 31 1993 a trans man named Brandon Teena was murdered in Nebraska along with two of his friends This murder was documented in the 1999 movie Boys Don t Cry starring Hilary Swank as Brandon Teena 15 With the publication of 1996 s Transgender Warriors Leslie Feinberg brought the word transgender more fully into use Like Rivera Feinberg also defined transgender very broadly including drag queens and gender nonconforming people from history A dedicated communist Feinberg included an analysis of many who are oppressed by the apparatus of capitalism 21 Transgender Day of Remembrance an annual day of remembrance to commemorate those murdered in transphobic hate crimes founded by transgender advocate Gwendolyn Ann Smith was first held in 1999 following the murder of Rita Hester in 1998 22 23 The Remembering our Dead web project was also set up in 1999 24 In June 2012 CeCe McDonald was wrongfully imprisoned for having defended herself against Neo Nazi attackers with a pair of scissors which resulted in the death of one of her assailants Her story was publicized by a GLAAD Media Award winning article in Ebony com Laverne Cox openly trans actress on Orange Is the New Black launched a campaign to raise the consciousness of cruel prison conditions for incarcerated trans individuals and rallied to free CeCe After serving 19 months she was released in January 2014 citation needed nbsp Left OUT Party Two signs reflecting some of the individuals protesting On March 26 27 2013 LGBT activists gathered at the Supreme Court in Washington D C to support marriage equality but amid these demonstrations one speaker was asked to edit their proceedings to conceal their trans identity and the trans community was asked to lower their pride flags This incident follows years of tension between activist groups namely Human Rights Campaign and the trans community because the trans community is often neglected or blatantly excluded from events and political consideration The incident resulted in a backlash and public criticism by the trans community In response activist groups apologized for the incident and in 2014 HRC promised to energize efforts for promoting trans rights citation needed In Florida in March 2015 Representative Frank Artiles R Miami proposed House Bill 583 which would ensure that individuals who enter public facilities such as bathrooms or locker rooms designated for those who are of the other biological sex could be jailed for up to 60 days Artiles claims that it was proposed for the sake of public safety 25 In September 2017 the Botswana High Court ruled that the refusal of the Registrar of National Registration to change a transgender man s gender marker was unreasonable and violated his constitutional rights to dignity privacy freedom of expression equal protection of the law freedom from discrimination and freedom from inhumane and degrading treatment LGBT activists celebrated the ruling describing it as a great victory 26 27 At first the Botswana Government announced it would appeal the ruling but decided against it in December supplying the trans man with a new identity document that reflects his gender identity 28 A similar case where a transgender woman sought to change her gender marker to female was heard in December 2017 The High Court ruled that the Government must recognize her gender identity She dedicated her victory to every single trans diverse person in Botswana 29 In 2023 trans rights protesters occupied the Oklahoma state capital after passage of Senate Bill 129 30 Issues of concernThe examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Legislation regarding usage of public restrooms Main article Bathroom bill nbsp Texan protest outside senate committee against bathroom bill March 2017 In the United States the bathroom bill issue first came to public attention in 2013 when the Colorado Civil Rights Division ruled in favor of transgender six year old student Coy Mathis right to use the girls toilet at her elementary school in Fountain Colorado 31 The case along with Mathis and her family was again brought to public attention with the 2016 release of the documentary Growing Up Coy 32 In the wake of the Mathis case numerous states have put forth or passed legislation which obligates transgender people to use the public bathroom corresponding to their sex as assigned at birth 33 As of July 2017 sixteen states had considered such bills and one state North Carolina passed its bill into law The North Carolina House Bill 2 or HB2 was passed into law in February 2017 33 HB2 quickly garnered attention as the first law of its kind and sparked high profile condemnation including cancellations of concerts and sporting events by Bruce Springsteen and the NCAA 34 In the midst of the controversy and the inauguration of a new governor of North Carolina the bill was repealed by the state legislature on March 30 2017 34 Education nbsp Kill bigot bill protest in Australia February 2022 The treatment of transgender people in educational environments has often been a focal point of the movement s concern In a survey of Canadian high schools conducted between 2007 and 2009 74 of students who identified themselves as transgender reported having experienced verbal harassment over their gender expression 37 reported physical harassment over their gender expression and 49 of trans students reported at least one instance of sexual harassment within the last school year 35 In 2013 Smith College an all women liberal arts US college gained notoriety for denying admission to Calliope Wong a transgender woman 36 Following the incident the college s administration and student activists engaged in a protracted battle around transgender women s rights The first women s college in the United States to open admission to transgender women was Mills College in the year of 2014 37 followed closely behind by Mount Holyoke in the same year 38 After Mills and Mount Holyoke Simmons University Scripps College Bryn Mawr and Wellesley changed their policy to accept transgender students Smith College and Barnard College were the last US women s colleges to change their policies to admit transgender students effective on May and June 2015 respectively 39 Student activists at US women s colleges are credited for the introduction of more inclusionary policies allowing admission of trans women in spaces which historically have excluded them Mount Holyoke remains gender inclusive admitting not only transgender women but also transgender men and non binary people under its all persons but cisgender men policy 39 Statistics of oppression Further information Transgender inequality In a survey conducted by National Center for Transgender Equality and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force called Injustice at Every Turn A Report of the National Transgender Discrimination Survey respondents reported that 90 of them had experienced discrimination and harassment in the work place and at school The trans community experiences rates of unemployment that are double the national average Additionally one out of every twelve trans women and one out of every eight trans women of color are physically attacked or assaulted in public 40 failed verification Health care In 2021 Alabama introduced house bill 1 the Vulnerable Child Compassion and Protection Act make it a felony for doctors to prescribe hormone blockers delay or prevent puberty and hormone replacement therapy HRT 41 Arkansas introduced and passed HB1570 the Save Adolescents from Experimentation SAFE act 42 The SAFE act prohibits doctors from treating anyone under the age of 18 with gender affirming care North Carolina SB 514 43 and Oklahoma SB 676 44 implement similar medical bans as the previous bills but extend the age restriction to anyone under 21 In 2021 33 states have introduced bills targeted at transgender individuals with the majority of them being similar to previous listed bills these bills are aimed to limit access to healthcare for transgender individuals and youth 45 People of color nbsp Black trans lives matter poster in Springfield Oregon July 2020 Transgender people of color often face an identity that is under speculation suspicion doubt and policing Those within the trans community are often left out from the wealthy able bodied American and white experience that those in the non trans community often focus on and are subject to discrimination as a transgender person and as a person of color 46 The focus of the realms of trans visibility in pop culture and trans organizations has mostly been on white people 47 Historically this is in part due to the rejection of an individual by family members at a young age The majority of transgender women of color say Juline A Koken David S Bimbi and Jeffrey T Parsons experience verbal and physical abuse at the hands of their family members upon disclosing their transgender identity 48 As transgender women of color face both gender and racial discrimination their experiences may be qualitatively different from white transgender women African American and Latino families are deeply rooted in religious tradition which may lead to more socially conservative and rigid ideas about gender roles homosexuality and traditionalism In addition parents also worry that their children will face additional hardships as members of double minorities 48 Some of the ways white transgender people have more privilege than those of their non white counterparts include racialized violence better pay better representation and benefits from the mainstream media movement citation needed According to a National Transgender Discrimination survey the combination of anti transgender bias and individual racism results in transgender people of color being 6 times more likely to experience physical violence when interacting with the police compared to cisgender White people two thirds of LGBT homicide victims being transgender women of color and a startling 78 attempt suicide 49 50 Of the 17 homicides of trans and gender nonconforming people in 2017 that the project has counted so far 16 had been people of color 15 had been transgender women and 13 had been black transgender women 51 The NCAVP survey also found that trans survivors were 1 7 times more likely to be the victims of sexual violence than cisgender survivors Transgender non conforming individuals also reported over four times the national average of HIV infection 2 64 compared to 0 6 respectively with rates for transgender women 3 76 and those who are unemployed 4 67 being even higher 52 Black transgender people were affected by HIV even more so than these averages 20 23 of transgender individuals with HIV are black 53 According to the National Transgender Discrimination Survey 41 of respondents reported attempting suicide compared to 1 6 of the general population with unemployment low income and assault both sexual and physical raising the risk factors 52 The social stigma of being transgender is a cause for poor health care which manifests into other areas of transgender people Social determinants of health including violence and discrimination may result in negative personal psychological and physiological effects citation needed The access to proper health care is essential in both the transitioning and resilience In a study of resilience of transgender people of color Jay a 41 year old FTM POC stated he had no place to turn to get help in transition and worked five jobs trying to save money for surgery that he never knew if he would be able to afford 54 Another key factor to the resilience to opposition of transgender POC involved having a strong sense of pride in both ethnic and gender identities Developing this sense of pride can be a process which involves overcoming barriers such as transphobia and racism However once these barriers are in fact crossed transgender POC can start to see themselves in a better light and use their inner strength and confidence to be more persistent optimistic and positivity oriented In recent years there have been several housing crises among transgender people especially transgender people of color According to a 2016 Gallup poll 10 052 million people in the United States identify as lesbian gay or transgender and millennials or those born between 1980 and 1998 drive virtually all of all of the increases overall LGBT self identification 55 As the millennial generation has entered the college age trans individuals have seen difficulty in securing basic housing rights and needs There is a definite predominance of sex segregated bathrooms locker rooms and housing where transgender people regularly are denied access and are harassed and challenged for their gender identity 56 Most universities operate on the premise that gender is binary and static and this can be especially problematic with either poorer transgender individuals or transgender people of color since 55 of college students in the United States are white 57 and the average income for families with college students is 74 000 60 higher than the national average of 46 326 58 Poverty Black transgender people live in extreme poverty with 34 reporting a household income of less than 10 000 a year which is more than twice the rate for transgender people of all races 15 four times the black population 9 and eight times the U S population 4 53 Transgender people of color are more likely to be poor be homeless or lack a college degree 47 Multiple factors pile up on each other that force many transgender people of color to be homeless for instance many individuals are involved in abusive relationships or live in crime ridden neighborhoods because of the difficulty finding employment as a transgender person and or experiencing job loss due to transphobia in the work place 54 Those with greater socioeconomic status might use their social connections to advocate for access to appropriate housing for transgender students in ways that are not possible for most lower income families one proposal comes from the Administration for Children and Families which issued the largest ever LGBT focused federal grant to develop a model program to support LGBT foster youth and prevent them from being homeless 59 Transmisogyny See also Transmisogyny Trans people experience a disproportionately large number of hate crimes with trans women experiencing the majority of these crimes In fact over half of all anti LGBTQIA homicides were perpetrated against transgender women 60 Transgender women face harsher levels of discrimination than other transgender people A study on workplace experiences after people receive sex changes found that trans women on average lose almost one third of their salary see Gender pay gap in the United States are respected less and receive more harassment At the same time trans men often experience salary raises and greater authority in the workplace 61 The experiences trans men face are vastly different from those of trans women trans men who were raised as female were treated differently as soon as they came out as male They gained professional experience but lost intimacy exuded authority but caused fear 62 Cultural sexism is evident towards trans men because it is easier to be low disclosure than trans women 62 They are usually not recognized as trans which is known as passing and it avoids transphobia and discrimination by others Women s appearances get more attention says Julia Serano a transfeminist and women s actions are commented on and critiqued more than men so it just makes sense that people will focus more on trans women than trans men 62 Definition of gender nbsp New Hampshire U S January 2019In 2018 over 2 600 scientists signed an open letter in opposition to Trump administration plans to legally define gender as a binary condition determined at birth based on genitalia including plans to clarify disputes using genetic testing stating with emphasis This proposal is fundamentally inconsistent not only with science but also with ethical practices human rights and basic dignity 63 Mika Tosca an assistant professor of climate science at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago told BuzzFeed News As a trans woman and as a scientist the Trump administration proposal is inherently an attack on my humanity my ability to exist in the world and to safely navigate certain spaces and It was really important that we gather as many scientists as we could to say that so scientists ourselves were not complicit in promoting this wholly flawed nonscientific effort 64 The New York Times wrote that the Trump administration proposal if implemented would be acutely felt in schools and their most visible battlegrounds locker rooms and bathrooms 65 OrganizationsMain article List of transgender rights organizations International organizations such as GATE and World Professional Association for Transgender Health WPATH work specifically towards transgender rights Other national level organizations also work for transgender rights such as in the United States the National Center for Transgender Equality NCTE GenderPAC Sylvia Rivera Law Project the Transgender Law Center and in the U K The Gender Trust Trans Media Watch and Press for Change ReligionsFurther information Transgender people and religion This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 Reform Judaism In 2015 the American Union for Reform Judaism adopted a Resolution on the Rights of Transgender and Gender Non Conforming People urging clergy and synagogue attendants to actively promote tolerance and inclusion of such individuals 66 In popular cultureMajor events Carey Purcell states that these moments have been key to bringing awareness to the transgender movement and fight for transgender rights 67 Renee Richards sues the US Open to play as a woman after sex reassignment surgery 1976 68 Paris is Burning is released depicting the lives of Latino African American gay and transgender communities and drag ball competitions in New York 1991 69 Boys Don t Cry wins acclaim and Oscar 1999 70 Alexis Arquette appears on The Surreal Life 2006 71 Candis Cayne appears on Dirty Sexy Money 2007 72 Isis King is the first trans model on America s Next Top Model 2008 73 Chaz Bono announces he will be transitioning from female to male 2009 74 Kye Allums is the first openly transgender NCAA athlete 2010 75 Miss Universe allows transgender women to compete 2012 76 Laverne Cox is the first transgender person to appear on Time magazine 2014 77 Transparent wins a Golden Globe 2015 78 Caitlyn Jenner interviews with Diane Sawyer shedding light on her transition experience 2015 79 Jazz Jennings is the youngest transgender person to become a pop culture icon first interviewed by Barbra Walters at the age of six 2007 80 Gottmik becomes the first transgender male to compete on reality television series RuPaul s Drag Race Season 13 2021 81 Representation in media Representation in pop culture has major effects on both the transgender and cisgender communities In addition to the above list Wendy Carlos synthesizer player and recording artist in 1979 announced that she had been living at least 11 years as a woman and that she had undergone reassignment surgery Elizabeth Tisdell and Patricia Thompson conducted a study on the effects of representation in the media on teachers and its effect on the way they teach in the classroom This study found that when teachers had been exposed to programming that featured diverse characters in a positive light teachers were more open to teaching their students in a more open accepting way 82 In this study the authors found that media reinforces the values of the dominant culture and is one of the most powerful ways to informally educate people 82 Tisdell and Thompson state that this representation is a way in which people construct ideas of themselves and others and that more representation lends legitimacy to identities and movements such as the transgender movement In a separate study GLAAD looked at the representation of transgender characters in the media over the last ten years 83 After examining many different episodes and storylines GLAAD found that transgender characters were cast in a victim role in 40 of the catalogued episodes and were cast as killers or victims in 21 of the episodes 83 They also found that the most common profession of transgender characters in the episodes was sex workers seen in about 20 of the episodes 83 In addition to the representation of transgender characters the authors found that anti transgender slurs language and dialogue were present in at least 61 of the episodes 83 Activists within the transgender rights movement argue that representation such as these set the movement back in gaining understanding within mainstream society Jayce Montgomery is a trans man who argues that these types of representation always displaying transgender people in the stereotypical way You know masculine or this is the man this is the woman role And not really delving into their background and what they actually go through 84 In the same conversation Stacey Rice goes on in the same conversation with Bitch Media to make the point that well known transgender celebrities are not representative of the general transgender community s experiences 84 Rice then goes on to say that while these celebrities are not representative of the average transgender person s experience the visibility they bring to the transgender rights movement does nothing but help the cause 84 Personalities Many celebrities have spoken out in support of transgender rights and often in conjunction with overall support for the LGBTQ community Numerous celebrities voice such support for the Human Rights Campaign including Archie Panjabi Lance Bass Tituss Burgess Chelsea Clinton George Clooney Tim Cook Jesse Tyler Ferguson Sally Field Lady Gaga Whoopi Goldberg Anne Hathaway Jennifer Hudson Caitlyn Jenner Jazz Jennings Elton John Cyndi Lauper Jennifer Lopez Demi Lovato Natasha Lyonne Elliot Page Brad Pitt Geena Rocero Bruce Springsteen Jeffrey Tambor Charlize Theron Miley Cyrus and Lana Wachowski 85 86 87 88 Magnus Hirschfeld was a German physician and advocate for sexual minorities Much of his medical research was on sexuality specifically homosexuality He was one of the earliest to suggest that homosexuality was innate Along with Max Spohr Franz Josef von Bulow and Eduard Oberg he founded the Scientific Humanitarian Committee in 1897 which is considered to be the first gay rights organization 89 Hirschfield also established the Institute for Sexual Research which would go on to perform the first modern vaginoplasties by 1930 Unfortunately most of his books and research were burned by the Nazis 90 In the same vein Harry Benjamin German American sexologist author of The Transsexual Phenomenon was a supporter of transgender rights and helped establish the medical procedures and Standards of Care for transgender persons in the United States Laverne Cox Main article Laverne Cox Orange Is the New Black actress Laverne Cox has been particularly outspoken about the importance of transgender rights Being transgender herself Cox has experienced firsthand the issues that surround those who are transgender and often uses her own story to promote the movement for transgender rights 91 She sees her fame as an opportunity to bring awareness to causes that matter and that her unique position legitimizes the transgender rights movement 92 Particularly she believes that transgender individuals have been historically overlooked and sidelined not just socially but in the fight for civil rights as well 93 Cox acknowledges the progress that has been made for Gay rights but that it is important to focus on transgender rights separately seeing as it has historically been grouped together with other causes and used as an umbrella term 94 In 2014 Glamour magazine named Cox Woman of the Year in recognition of her activism 95 Caitlyn Jenner Main article Caitlyn Jenner In April 2015 Olympic gold medalist and reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner came out as transgender 96 The news had been speculated for months leading up to the announcement but still shocked the public and received considerable attention 97 Jenner expressed the desire to transition and to be known as Caitlyn Jenner and introduced herself for the first time on the cover of Vanity Fair 98 Jenner s transition has been documented by the short lived reality television series titled I am Cait 99 Jenner was determined to make a difference and bring awareness to transgender rights believing that telling her story can do so Jenner did increase transgender visibility however her commentary and series were criticized for misrepresenting the struggles of the majority the trans community who are much less privileged than her and face deeper problems 100 Jenner has been sharply criticized by many activists in the transgender rights movement for stating in an interview with TMZ that trans girls should not be allowed to compete in girls sports at school backing Republican Party views on transgender people in sports 20 Her comments lead to criticism amongst the trans and broader LGBTQ community some advocates have questioned Jenner s status as a trans activist saying that Jenner did not represent the broader LGBT community 101 102 Janet Mock Main article Janet Mock Janet Mock is an author activist and TV show host who advocates transgender rights sex workers rights and more among marginalized communities 103 104 105 Mock uses storytelling as a way to diminish stigma of marginalized communities 105 She has authored and edited many works addressing her personal struggles as well as exploring various social issues affecting various communities 105 Mock acknowledged in an interview that her experience alone does not speak for all in the transgender community but it can provide a platform for some to reflect upon 106 She addressed and encouraged intersectionality and inclusiveness in the feminist movement at the 2017 Women s March 105 104 103 107 Notable transgender activistsSee also Category Transgender rights activists A list of notable transgender activists listed in alphabetical order by surname Tamara Adrian the first openly transgender woman to be elected to office in Venezuela Donnie Anderson American Baptist minister and LGBTQ activist who is a transgender woman 108 Carla Antonelli Spanish actress and politician who was the first openly transgender person to participate in Spain s legislature 109 Jenny Bailey Cambridge UK mayor who is also married to a transgender partner 110 Georgina Beyer former New Zealand politician who was the first openly transgender mayor and the first transgender politician to become member of Parliament in the world 111 Elie Che British model and trans activist she became an international cultural focus due to her early death 112 Anna Grodzdka a Polish politician and the first openly transgender person to be elected as an MP in Europe 113 Jamie Lee Hamilton the first transgender person who ran for office in Canada 114 Kim Coco Iwamoto Hawaii s Civil Rights Commissioner and former member of the Board of Education 115 Aya Kamikawa and Tomoya Hosoda Japan s first openly transgender politicians 116 Kit Malone transgender rights activist and educator in Indiana Shabnam Mausi the first transgender person in India to be elected for public office 117 118 Sarah McBride Delaware State Senator from Senate District 1 is the first openly transgender person elected to any state Senate in the United States in 2020 Micheline Montreuil Canadian politician lawyer and transgender rights activist Luisa Revilla Urcia the first openly transgender woman to be elected to office in Uruguay 119 Geraldine Roman the first openly transgender woman to be elected to Congress in the Philippines 120 Lauren Scott US LGBTQ activist who ran for Nevada Assembly as a Republican 121 Amanda Simpson US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Operational Energy and the highest ranking openly transgender appointee in the United States 122 Nikki Sinclaire former member of the European Parliament 123 Michelle Suarez the first openly transgender woman to be elected to office in Uruguay Brianna Titone Colorado State Representative from HD27 is the first openly transgender person elected in 2018 and reelected in 2020 Brianna Westbrook a US democratic socialist politician and Vice Chair of the Arizona Democratic Party 124 See also nbsp Law portal nbsp Transgender portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Transgender rights nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Transgender rights movement Anti gender movement Outline of transgender topics Transgender flagReferences Zimman Lal 1 March 2019 Trans self identification and the language of neoliberal selfhood Agency power and the limits of monologic discourse International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2019 256 147 175 doi 10 1515 ijsl 2018 2016 ISSN 1613 3668 S2CID 150715919 Retrieved 11 October 2021 For trans people a key principle of activism is gender self determination which treats each individual as the ultimate authority on their own gender identity Self identification is a lynchpin of transgender identity politics in the United States and increasingly throughout the globalizing world Explained Countries that allow gender self identification and the law in India The Indian Express 1 July 2021 Retrieved 11 October 2021 Self identification or self id is the concept that a person should be allowed to legally identify with the gender of their choice by simply declaring so and without facing any medical tests This has been a long held demand of trans right groups around the world Carreno Belen Allen Nathan 29 June 2021 Spain moves step closer to gender self identification Reuters Retrieved 11 October 2021 Social sciences Transgender Activism Encyclopedia of Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender amp Queer Culture Archived from the original on 2012 05 25 Retrieved 2022 12 27 Gilliland AJ Caswell M 2016 Records and Their Imaginaries Imagining the Impossible Making Possible the Imagined Archival Science 16 12 13 doi 10 1007 s10502 015 9259 z S2CID 147077944 via eScholarship a b AFaderman Lillian and Stuart Timmons 2006 Gay L A A History of Sexual Outlaws Power Politics and Lipstick Lesbians Basic Books pp 1 2 ISBN 0 465 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2021 12 07 Steinmetz Katy 29 May 2014 TIME Cover Story Interview With Trans Icon Laverne Cox TIME com Retrieved 2016 11 19 Breen M Laverne Cox The Making of an Icon Advocate 1074 52 Aug 2014 ISSN 0001 8996 Laverne Cox says this one simple change will help give trans people equal rights Business Insider Retrieved 2016 11 19 University Nico Machlitt Sophomore at Hofstra 2014 10 14 The Next Civil Rights Frontier How the Transgender Movement Is Taking Over The Huffington Post Retrieved 2016 10 27 Post James Nichols The Huffington 2014 11 05 Laverne Cox Named One Of Glamour Magazine s Women Of The Year The Huffington Post Retrieved 2016 11 19 Sieczkowski Cavan 2015 04 24 Bruce Jenner Comes Out As Transgender The Huffington Post Retrieved 2016 11 19 Bruce Jenner I m a Woman ABC News 2015 04 27 Retrieved 2016 11 19 Bissinger Buzz Caitlyn Jenner The Full Story HWD Retrieved 2016 11 19 Watch the First Promo for Caitlyn Jenner s New Docu Series on E E Online Retrieved 2016 11 19 Emanuella Grinberg 3 June 2015 What it s like to be transgender and not Caitlyn Jenner CNN Retrieved 2016 11 19 Jenner says transgender girls in women s sports is unfair The Associated Press 2 May 2021 Retrieved 3 May 2021 Caitlyn Jenner says transgender girls in women s sports is unfair NBC News 3 May 2021 a b Janet Mock calls for intersectional and inclusive movement The Washington Post 2017 01 21 Retrieved 2017 09 22 a b Vagianos Alanna 2017 01 18 Janet Mock Sex Workers Rights Must Be Part Of The Women s March The Huffington Post Retrieved 2017 09 22 a b c d Janet Mock s official website Janetmock com Retrieved 2017 09 22 Cox Ana M 2017 05 24 Janet Mock Struggles With Being Called a Trans Advocate The New York Times Retrieved 2017 09 22 Lasher Megan 2017 01 20 Janet Mock Thinks Sex Workers Rights Need to Be Included in the Women s March TIME Archived from the original on January 22 2017 Retrieved 2017 09 22 Kuffner Alex September 4 2018 Prominent minister s long journey to womanhood The Providence Journal Retrieved January 4 2024 BENITO EMILIO DE 2011 02 14 Carla Antonelli Woman on a transformative mission El Pais ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 2019 12 04 Elliott Chris 2017 05 28 Cambridge s and Britain s first transgender mayor 10 years on cambridgenews Retrieved 2019 12 04 Beyer Georgina New Zealand Parliament www parliament nz Retrieved 2019 12 04 UK Trans Icon Elie Che Found Dead PAPER 2020 09 03 Retrieved 2021 10 01 Hudson David 2013 05 30 Anna Grodzka what s it like being the world s only transsexual MP The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2019 12 04 Transgender activist Jamie Lee Hamilton enrolls for Vancouver school board by election The Georgia Straight 2017 08 29 Retrieved 2019 12 04 With Kim Coco Iwamoto Hawaii Could Make Trans History www advocate com 2018 07 16 Retrieved 2019 12 04 Rich Motoko 2017 05 19 Japanese Transgender Politician Is Showing I Exist Here The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2019 12 04 India s First Transgender MLA Eyes MP Polls for a Return to Active Politics News18 28 July 2018 Retrieved 2019 12 04 Desk India TV News 2014 07 17 Shabnam Mausi India s first eunuch to become an MLA www indiatvnews com Retrieved 2019 12 04 October 10 GenieCharlotte pm 2014 at 5 32 pm EST at 5 32 2014 10 10 Peruvian voters elect country s first trans council member Washington Blade Gay News Politics LGBT Rights Retrieved 2019 12 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Chen Heather 2016 05 10 The Philippines elects its first transgender politician Retrieved 2019 12 04 Nevada Republican may be nation s first transgender legislator Washington Blade Gay News Politics LGBT Rights 2014 07 03 Retrieved 2019 12 04 Amanda Simpson Wikipedia 2019 11 28 retrieved 2019 12 04 I have this thing about injustice 2016 07 11 Retrieved 2019 12 04 Your Turn Why Congress needs its first transgender representative azcentral Retrieved 2018 08 27 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transgender rights movement amp oldid 1214352773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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