Brújula Intersexual (Intersex Compass) is a voluntary organisation for intersex people that promotes the human rights and bodily autonomy of intersex people in Mexico, and across Latin America. Founded in 2013,[1] Brújula Intersexual provides peer support, education and information.
History
Brújula Intersexual was founded by Laura Inter on the day after Intersex Awareness Day in 2013, 27 October.[2] The organization is intended to help intersex people find each other, connect, and improve their human rights situation.[2]
Activities
Physical integrity and bodily autonomy
Brújula Intersexual calls for self-determination by intersex people.[3] It documents the health and human rights situation facing intersex people in Mexico, and in the Latin American region more broadly, including societal taboos, incomprehension, unnecessary medicalization, and discrimination.[2][4][5] Ricardo Baruch, writing in Animal Politico and citing Laura Inter, describes the situation on where intersex is constantly left out of discussion or policy because it is not very understood, even though it is a biological situation.[6]
The organization also engages in training for human rights and public institutions.[8][9]
Access to healthcare
Brújula Intersexual has found that few doctors are trained and sensitized on intersex issues, leading to a tendency to recommend genital surgeries or hormonal treatments to create "normality" even where individuals have escaped such intersex medical interventions as children.[6] It has documented problems with medical examinations and treatments as a result of such practices.[4] Brújula Intersexual has also documented significant levels of poverty and disparities in access to health care based upon family wealth and income.[4][5]
Identification documents
Laura Inter and Eva Alcántara of UAM Xochimilco have cited arguments that the most pressing problems facing intersex people are treatment to enforce a sex binary, and not the existence of the sex binary itself.[10] Inter has imagined a society where sex or gender classifications are removed from birth certificates and other official identification documents.[4][11]