According to a 2016 study from The Journal of Sex Research, one of the most common themes of discrimination for genderqueer people is the incorrect use of gender pronouns. The study labeled this as 'nonaffirmation', and it occurs when others do not affirm one's sense of gender identity. The negative effects of misgendering are well-documented. A 2018 study published in the American Psychological Association found a positive association between misgendering and anxiety, depression, and stress.[2] Repeated misgendering by strangers, also known as chronic misgendering, can amplify these stressors to the point where trans individuals do not want to leave their homes.[3]
Participants within the 2016 study also reported experiencing gender policing.[4] Gender policing is especially common in K-12 schools on a systematic level. One way in which systematic gender policing manifests in schools is through sex-segregated bathrooms. A study published in the Journal of Gay & Lesbian Services found that 23.9% of trans students surveyed, or 439 students out of 1836, were denied access to gender-appropriate bathrooms or housing at school due to being transgender or gender non-conforming.[5] An article from the book Violence and Gender, states that this experienced violence and discrimination leads to high levels of stress. This article stated that non-binary participants are less likely to experience hate speech (24.4% vs. 50%) compared to trans men and equally as likely (24.4% vs. 24.4%) as trans women, yet genderqueer/nonbinary participants, along with trans women, are more likely than trans men individuals to be concerned about the safety of themselves and others.[6]
Bathroom access
Non-binary individuals, when interviewed, found binary spaces such as bathrooms to be difficult to navigate, reporting visual inspections, questioning, and harassment when entering such spaces. In a 2019 paper by Douglas Schrock, interviewees reported being addressed with fear, being pressured to apologize for their appearance or androgyny, verbal confrontations, and in an extreme case, a stranger attempting to break into a stall due to suspicion.[7] A quantitative study found that bathroom discrimination significantly increased the odds of considering or attempting suicide, with 60% of surveyed youths who were denied access to gender-appropriate bathrooms considering suicide.[8]
Misleading interpretation of the high suicide rates of trans youths have led some to position transness as being harmful to children, or of presenting trans people as mentally ill. Whether through ignorance or malice, connecting transness solely to suicide and mental illness is a misrepresentation whose effect is to diminish the importance and life-affirming nature of trans identities in the best case and intentionally attack and deny the existence of trans people in the worst case.[9]
United States
Of the approximately 6,450 transgender and gender-nonconforming respondents to the National Transgender Discrimination Survey (NTDS), conducted by the National Center for Transgender Equality and National Gay and Lesbian Task Force in 2008–2009,[10]: 12–15, 50 864 (13%) chose the write-in option for gender identity, "A gender not listed here (please specify)".[10]: 16 (The other options were "Male/man", "Female/women", and "Part time as one gender, part time as another".)[10]: 16 Responses from these participants were analysed in the 2011 journal article "A Gender Not Listed Here: Genderqueers, Gender Rebels, and Otherwise in the National Transgender Discrimination Survey".[11] The "a gender not listed here" (Q3GNL) individuals reported higher rates of physical (32% vs. 25%) and sexual (15% vs 9%) assault due to bias than other NTDS respondents.[11]: 23
According to the NTDS, almost all non-binary people had experienced discrimination in the workplace. Their findings show that being out as a non-binary person negatively affects that person's employment outcomes. Though non-binary people have higher unemployment rates than those who identify with a specified gender, masculine non-binary people who still appear male, or are not "passing as female" generally have a harder time in the work environment.[12] 19% of Q3GNL respondents to the NTDS reported job loss due to anti-transgender bias, a smaller proportion than for other respondents (27%).[13]: 8
Not only does discrimination against transgender and non-binary people in the workplace affect transgender and non-binary employees, but it also affects the entire workplace team, distracting the victim and the perpetrator from the job itself.[14] Transgender and non-binary individuals in the U.S. often face workplace discrimination like conflicts related to their bathroom usage, backlash over transitioning genders and being misgendered by coworkers. The Center of American Progress in 2012 also found that there is also a substantial amount of public ignorance towards transgender and non-binary communities, in comparison to LGB community peers. Because of that, negative psychological consequences occur as a result like mental health disparities, higher rates in attempted suicide, and anxiety in public spaces.[15]
Military discrimination
In the United States military, physical fitness tests such as the United States Army Physical Fitness Test only have male or female standards with gender norming. The National Center for Transgender Equality has called on the US Department of Defense to "adopt policies to permit transgender service members with a non-binary gender identity to serve in a manner consistent with their gender identity."[16]
A 2015 survey conducted by the Scottish Trans Alliance examined experiences of medical services among 224 non-binary individuals who had attended a gender identity clinic (GIC) in the preceding two years. When asked if they had experienced "problems getting the assistance they needed" because of their non-binary identity, 28% chose "yes", 28% "maybe", and 44% "no". Denial of treatment was reported by 13 respondents (6%), delay of treatment by 12 (5%), and lack of knowledge or understanding about their identities by 10 (5%). When asked if they had been pressured by the GIC, 43% chose "yes", 12% "unsure", and 46% "no". Respondents reported having been pressured to appear more binary (36 individuals, 17%), to change their names (19, 9%), to socially transition to fulfil the real-life experience requirement (13, 6%), or to pursue medical transition (13, 6%).[18]
Under the law of the United Kingdom, individuals are considered by the state to be either female or male, the sex that is stated on their birth certificate. This means that non-binary gender is not recognized in UK law.
United States
A survey conducted among rural U.S. LGBT populations suggested that transgender and non-binary patients were three times more likely to find health care providers that have other LGBT patients. They were also three times more likely to drive over an hour out of the way to visit their health care provider due "to the fact that in the last year, one in ten had visited an LGBT-specific health care clinic, which are often located in urban areas."[19]
A 2015 study found that 20.4% of transgender and gender-nonconforming respondents to the NTDS reported having experienced discrimination when trying to access doctors and hospitals, 11.9% when attempting to access emergency rooms, and 4.6% when attempting to access the service of an ambulance.[20]
Russia
In contemporary Russian psychiatry and psychology, as a rule, a binary approach to gender identity is used. V. D. Mendelevich, a psychiatrist, testifies that non-binary people are faced with demands to "determine" their gender identity in the binary paradigm. Refusal to do so is perceived as psychopathological. According to Mendelevich, the use of this approach does not correspond to modern scientific ideas about norm and pathology.[21]
The Sex Discrimination Act of 1984 did not explicitly protect non-binary people from discrimination until the Sex Discrimination Amendment (Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Intersex Status) Act of 2013, which prohibited any discrimination on the grounds of "gender identity" and "intersex status". This amendment also removed the use of "other" and "opposite sex" in exchange for broader terms like "different sex".[22]
In 2014, the Australian High Court legally recognized non-binary as a category for people to identify with on legal documents. After Norrie May-Welby made a request for a third gender identity on legal documents and was eventually denied, Norrie chose to take the matter up with Australia's Human Rights Commission and their Court of Appeal. After a four-year-long legal battle beginning in 2010, Norrie finally won the case. From this and the legalizing of the matter in New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory decided to pass a law that recognized non-binary identities. Several other states and territories followed suit afterward.
Canada
In 2002, the Northwest Territories was the first of Canada's provinces to explicitly include gender identity as a protected group from discrimination under the law, followed by Manitoba in 2012.[23] By 2015, every Canadian province and territory had included similar changes to their discrimination laws.
In 2017, Canada passed Bill C-16 which formally recognized non-binary gender people and granted them protection under the law towards discrimination on the grounds of "gender identity" and "gender expression."[24]
United Kingdom
Non-binary is not legally recognized as a gender identity in the United Kingdom. The Gender Recognition Act 2004 allowed people to apply to the Gender Recognition Panel for a change of gender after living as the gender they wished to show on all their legal documents and being given a diagnosis of gender dysphoria by at least two health professionals. However, this only allowed for a legal change of gender from male to female or vice versa. There is no non-binary specific legal clinical pathway available for medical assistance, and non-binary people will receive a new NHS number denoting the sex opposite to the one they were assigned at birth.
United States
Despite being more likely to achieve higher levels of education when compared to the general public,[13]: 11 90% of non-binary individuals face discrimination, often in the form of harassment in the workplace. 19% percent of self-identifying non-binary individuals reported job loss as a result of their identities.[13] Anti-discrimination laws that prohibit discrimination specifically against non-binary individuals do not exist.[citation needed] However, the current proposed version of the federal Employment Non-Discrimination Act use such terms as "gender identity" and "gender expression", categories under which non-binary individuals fall due to the fact that their gender expression cannot be defined as male or female.[13]
In 2004, Jimmie Smith was terminated from the fire department in Salem, Ohio, after revealing their diagnosis with Gender Identity Disorder and intentions to undergo a male to female transition. The district court determined the reason for termination was because of their "transsexuality" and not their gender non-conformity. The case was appealed to the Sixth Circuit, which overturned that decision and clarified to courts that under Title VII, sex discrimination was to be considered broader than only the traditional assumptions of sex.[25]
Twelve states currently have legislation which bars discrimination based on gender identity.[26] Despite these efforts, non-binary individuals are subject to higher rates of physical and sexual assault and police harassment than those who identify as men or women, likely due to their gender expression or presentation.[11][27]
Identity documents
According to the Transgender Law Center, 70% of transgender people are not able to update their identity documents and one-third of have been harassed, assaulted or turned away when seeking basic services,[28] and one third are not able to update their documents post-transition.[29]
In 2016, the U.S. State Department was sued for denying a passport to Dana Zzyym, who is a veteran, an intersex person and then also identified as a non-binary person. Zzyym wrote "intersex" on their passport form instead of male or female, which were the only two available gender fields on the form. Zzyym was denied the passport, which led to LGBTQ advocacy organizations filing a lawsuit against the U.S. State Department on Zzyym's behalf. The advocacy group Lambda Legal argued for gender-neutral terms and a third option on U.S. passports, arguing that the existing passport fields violated the Due Process Clause and Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The State Department argued that adding additional gender fields to the passport form would prevent the agency's efforts to combat identity theft and passport fraud. The Tenth Circuit Court ruled in favor of Zzyym, the first time in U.S. history that the federal government recognized non-binary people.[30]
California, the District of Columbia, New York City, New York State, Iowa, Vermont, Oregon and Washington State have currently removed the surgical requirement to complete a change on a birth certificate. In these states, to change the gender on a birth certificate, one must fill out a standardized form but legal or medical approvals are not required. In Washington, D.C., the applicant fills out the top half of the form and a health or social service professional must fill out the bottom half. A person may face obstacles obtaining a court order in order to make a change to documents in other states. Tennessee is the only state that has a specific statute that forbids altering the gender designation on a birth certificate due to gender surgery, while Idaho and Ohio have the same prohibition, but via court decision rather than by statute; and in Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory, a court ruled that gender markers could not be changed on identity documents under any circumstances.[31][32]
In California, the Gender Recognition Act of 2017 was introduced in the State Senate in Sacramento in January 2017 and signed into law by governor Jerry Brown on October 19. The law recognizes a third gender option known as "non-binary" which may be used on state-issued documents such as driver's licenses to more accurately reflect a person's gender. Senate bill SB179 was originally drafted by State Senators Toni Atkins and Scott Wiener. The law also makes it easier for existing documents to be changed, by removing requirements for sworn statements by physicians and replacing it with a sworn attestation by the person seeking to make the change to their documents. The Executive Director of Equality California commented, "It is up to an individual—not a judge or even a doctor—to define a person's gender identity."[33][34]
The first two U.S. citizens to receive a court decreed non-binary gender were in Oregon and California. In Oregon, Elisa Rae Shupe was able to obtain a non-binary designation in June 2016 after a brief legal battle.[35][36] Following in Shupe's footsteps, California resident Sarah Kelly Keenan was also able to legally change her gender marker to non-binary in September 2016.[37] After both Shupe and Keenan had success with their cases, more people have been inspired to take on the legal battle of changing their gender to a non-binary marker. With the help of organizations such as the Nonbinary & Intersex Recognition Project dozens of these petitions have been granted and additional states have changed regulations to provide a third gender option on state ID, birth certificates, and/or court orders.[38]
According to the Human Rights Campaign, as of May 2023, more than 220 anti-LGBT bills target non-binary and transgender youth in the United States.[39]
^Hale, J.C. (1998) "...[O]ur embodiments and our subjectivities are abjected from social ontology: we cannot fit ourselves into extant categories without denying, eliding, erasing, or otherwise abjecting personally significant aspects of ourselves ... When we choose to live with and in our dislocatedness, fractured from social ontology, we choose to forgo intelligibility: lost in language and in social life, we become virtually unintelligible, even to ourselves..." from Consuming the Living, Dis(Re)Membering the Dead in the Butch/FtM Borderlands in the Gay and Lesbian Quarterly 4:311, 336 (1998). Retrieved on April 7, 2007.
^Kolysh, Simone (2021). Everyday Violence: The Public Harassment of Women and LGBTQ People. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. ISBN9781978823990.
^Nadal, Kevin L.; Whitman, Chassitty N.; Davis, Lindsey S.; Erazo, Tanya; Davidoff, Kristin C. (March 11, 2016). "Microaggressions Toward Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Genderqueer People: A Review of the Literature". The Journal of Sex Research. 53 (4–5): 488–508. doi:10.1080/00224499.2016.1142495. ISSN0022-4499. PMID26966779. S2CID23205208.
^Kattari, Shanna K.; Walls, N. Eugene; Whitfield, Darren L.; Langenderfer-Magruder, Lisa (April 3, 2015). "Racial and Ethnic Differences in Experiences of Discrimination in Accessing Health Services Among Transgender People in the United States". International Journal of Transgenderism. 16 (2): 68–79. doi:10.1080/15532739.2015.1064336. ISSN1553-2739. S2CID5500532.
^Менделевич, В. Д. (2020). "Небинарная гендерная идентичность и трансгендерность вне психиатрического дискурса". Неврологический вестник (in Russian). LII (2): 5–11. doi:10.17816/nb26268. ISSN1027-4898.
^Cossman, Brenda (January 2018). "Gender identity, gender pronouns, and freedom of expression: Bill C-16 and the traction of specious legal claims". University of Toronto Law Journal. 68 (1): 37–79. doi:10.3138/utlj.2017-0073. ISSN0042-0220. S2CID148916100.
Président de la république d'Albanie (sq) President i Republikëssë Shqipërisë Sceau du président de la république d'Albanie. Étendard du président de la république d'Albanie. Titulaire actuelBajram Begajdepuis le 24 juillet 2022(1 an, 7 mois et 11 jours) Création 20 février 1991 Mandant Assemblée d'Albanie Durée du mandat 5 ans, renouvelable une fois consécutivement Premier titulaire Ramiz Alia Résidence officielle Palais présidentiel (en) (Tirana) Rému...
Achillobator Periode Kapur Akhir,~96–89 jtyl PreЄ Є O S D C P T J K Pg N Diagram tengkorak yang menunjukkan ukuran dan elemen yang terawetkan dari spesimen holotipeTaksonomiDivisiManiraptoriformesSubdivisiManiraptoraKladPennaraptoraKladParavesInfradivisiDeinonychosauriaFamiliDromaeosauridaeSubfamiliEudromaeosauriaTribusDromaeosaurinaeGenusAchillobator lbs Achillobator (,/əˌkɪləˈbeɪtɔːr/, ə-KIL-ə-BAY-tor, berarti Pahlawan Achilles) adalah sebuah genus dinosaurus theropoda dr...
120th season of top-tier football in Belgium Football league seasonBelgian Pro LeagueSeason2022–23Dates22 July 2022 – 4 June 2023ChampionsRoyal AntwerpRelegatedOostendeZulte WaregemSeraingChampions LeagueRoyal AntwerpGenkEuropa LeagueUnion SGEuropa Conference LeagueClub Brugge GentMatches played330Goals scored1,011 (3.06 per match)Top goalscorerHugo Cuypers(27 goals)Biggest home winClub Brugge 7–0 Eupen(23 April 2023)Biggest away winOostende 1-6 Union SG(16 October 2022)Highest sco...
العلاقات الإسبانية اللوكسمبورغية إسبانيا لوكسمبورغ إسبانيا لوكسمبورغ تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات الإسبانية اللوكسمبورغية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين إسبانيا ولوكسمبورغ.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية �...
1948 United States Senate election in Wyoming ← 1942 November 2, 1948 1954 → Nominee Lester C. Hunt Edward V. Robertson Party Democratic Republican Popular vote 57,953 43,527 Percentage 57.11% 42.89% U.S. senator before election Edward V. Robertson Republican Elected U.S. Senator Lester C. Hunt Democratic Elections in Wyoming Federal government Presidential elections 1892 1896 1900 1904 1908 1912 1916 1920 1924 1928 1932 1936 1940 1944 1948 1952 1956 1960 19...
Primeira Liga 2016Primeira Liga 2016 Competizione Primeira Liga (Brasile) Sport Calcio Edizione 1ª Date dal 27 gennaio 2016al 20 aprile 2016 Luogo Brasile Partecipanti 12 Formula Gironi + eliminazione diretta A/R + finale Risultati Vincitore Fluminense(1º titolo) Statistiche Miglior giocatore Gustavo Scarpa Miglior marcatore Paolo Guerrero (3) Diego Souza (3) Incontri disputati 21 Gol segnati 44 (2,1 per incontro) Cronologia della competizione 2017 Manual...
Chemical compound JWH-368Legal statusLegal status CA: Schedule II UK: Class B Identifiers IUPAC name [5-(3-Fluorophenyl)-1-pentylpyrrol-3-yl]-naphthalen-1-ylmethanone CAS Number914458-31-4 YPubChem CID44418331ChemSpider23277909 YUNIIHYS2YS4WNMCompTox Dashboard (EPA)DTXSID60658824 Chemical and physical dataFormulaC26H24FNOMolar mass385.482 g·mol−13D model (JSmol)Interactive image SMILES CCCCCN1C=C(C=C1C2=CC(=CC=C2)F)C(=O)C3=CC=CC4=CC=CC=C43 InChI InChI=1S/C26H24FNO/...
Traditional Indonesian meat soup This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Coto makassar – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Coto MakassarCoto Makassar with KetupatTypeStewPlace of originIndonesiaRegion or stateSouth SulawesiMain ingr...
Ngành Da gaiThời điểm hóa thạch: Cambrian–Holocene TiềnЄ Є O S D C P T J K Pg N Kỷ Cambri-HolocenePhân loại khoa họcGiới (regnum)AnimaliaPhân giới (subregnum)Eumetazoa Nhánh ParaHoxozoaNhánh BilateriaNhánh Nephrozoa Liên ngành (superphylum)Deuterostomia Nhánh Ambulacraria Ngành (phylum)EchinodermataBruguière, 1791 [ex Klein, 1734]Chi điển hìnhEchinusLinnaeus, 1758 Phân ngành và lớp[2] Homalozoa † Gill & Caster, 1960 Homostelea † Homo...
Chapter of the New Testament John 12← chapter 11chapter 13 →John 12:12–15 in Greek in Papyrus 2 (Egyptian Museum, Florence, inv. nr. 7134). Luke 7:22-26.50 in Coptic on reverse. 6th century.BookGospel of JohnCategoryGospelChristian Bible partNew TestamentOrder in the Christian part4 John 12 is the twelfth chapter of the Gospel of John in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. It narrates an anointing of Jesus' feet, attributed to Mary of Bethany, as well as an account of th...
World War I memorial in Ypres, Belgium Menin Gate Memorial to the MissingCommonwealth War Graves CommissionThe Menin GateFor the missing of Commonwealth nations (except New Zealand and Newfoundland) who died in the Ypres Salient during the First World War.Unveiled24 July 1927Location50°51′08″N 02°53′30″E / 50.85222°N 2.89167°E / 50.85222; 2.89167near Ypres, West Flanders, BelgiumDesigned byReginald BlomfieldCommemorated54,896Burials by nationCommo...
Oxford University healthcare journal This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources. Find sources: Bandolier journal – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Bandolier was an independent healthcare journal about evidence-based healthcare, written by Oxford University scientists. It was started in 19...
Missile program of the United States Army Nike missile family and other missiles on display at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. From left, Nike Hercules, MIM-23 Hawk (front), MGM-29 Sergeant (back), LIM-49 Spartan, MGM-31 Pershing, MGM-18 Lacrosse, MIM-3 Nike Ajax, ENTAC (foreground) Project Nike (Greek: Νίκη, Victory) was a U.S. Army project, proposed in May 1945 by Bell Laboratories, to develop a line-of-sight anti-aircraft missile system. The project delivered the United States' first operat...
Identifier for file formats This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. Please help clarify the article. There might be a discussion about this on the talk page. (April 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message) A media type (formerly known as a MIME type)[1] is a two-part identifier for file formats and format contents transmitted on the Internet. Their purpose is somewhat similar to file extensions in that they identify the intended data format. The Internet Assigned...
Genus of flowering plants This article is about the plant genus. For the English village, see Crambe, North Yorkshire. For other uses, see Crambe (disambiguation). Crambe Crambe maritima in Estonia Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae Clade: Tracheophytes Clade: Angiosperms Clade: Eudicots Clade: Rosids Order: Brassicales Family: Brassicaceae Genus: CrambeL. Species See text Crambe is a genus of annual and perennial flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae, native to a variety of hab...
Poem by Longfellow For the historical event on which the poem is based, see Paul Revere's Midnight Ride. For 1931 painting by the American artist Grant Wood, see The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere (painting). Paul Revere's Ride was first published in The Atlantic Monthly in 1861. Paul Revere's Ride is an 1860 poem by American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow that commemorates the actions of American patriot Paul Revere on April 18, 1775, although with significant inaccuracies. It was first publi...
2012 IAAF World IndoorChampionshipsTrack events60 mmenwomen400 mmenwomen800 mmenwomen1500 mmenwomen3000 mmenwomen60 m hurdlesmenwomen4 × 400 m relaymenwomenField eventsHigh jumpmenwomenPole vaultmenwomenLong jumpmenwomenTriple jumpmenwomenShot putmenwomenCombined eventsPentathlonwomenHeptathlonmenvte The women's 60 metres at the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships will be held at the Ataköy Athletics Arena on 10 and 11 March. Medalists Gold Silver Bronze Veronica Campbell-Brown J...
1996 studio album by Riblja ČorbaOstalo je ćutanjeStudio album by Riblja ČorbaReleasedMay 2, 1996RecordedFebruary – April 1996[1]StudioStudio Pink, Zemun, BelgradeGenreHard rockLength39:10LabelWestern MusicProducerMilan PopovićMiša AleksićVlada BarjaktarevićRiblja Čorba chronology Nema laži, nema prevare – Uživo, Zagreb `85(1995) Ostalo je ćutanje(1996) Od Vardara pa do Triglava(1996) Ostalo je ćutanje (Serbian Cyrillic: Остало је ћутање, trans. S...