LQBTQIA2S and Sexuality History & Rights

260 bookmarks
Newest
LGBTQ History - GLSEN
LGBTQ History - GLSEN
For all of us, learning an LGBTQ-inclusive curriculum can help us better understand our world and our differences. For LGBTQ students in particular, it can mean feeling safer at school and hearing homophobic and transphobic remarks less frequently, according to GLSEN research. That's why we're sharing the resources below, from an interactive timeline and coloring book to many other classroom resources. Recognizing these benefits, former GLSEN Chapter leader Rodney Wilson, with the support of GLSEN's founder Kevin Jennings and many others, founded LGBTQ History Month in October 1994. While you can use these resources every October, they're perfect for use all year, so that students see the benefits year round. A great resource you can use to learn and teach about LGBTQ history is Making Gay History, the critically acclaimed and award-winning podcast that brings LGBTQ history to life through the voices of the people who lived it. Listen to the podcasts below to hear about the lives and legacies of Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, who were participants in the New York Stonewall riots in 1969.
·glsen.org·
LGBTQ History - GLSEN
May17.org
May17.org
The International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia was created in 2004 to draw the attention to the violence and discrimination experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex people and all other people with diverse sexual orientations, gender identities or expressions, and sex characteristics. The date of May 17th was specifically chosen to commemorate the World Health Organization’s decision in 1990 to declassify homosexuality as a mental disorder. The Day represents a major global annual landmark to draw the attention of decision makers, the media, the public, corporations, opinion leaders, local authorities, etc. to the alarming situation faced by people with diverse sexual orientations, gender identities or expressions, and sex characteristics. May 17 is now celebrated in more than 130 countries, including 37 where same-sex acts are illegal. Thousands of initiatives, big and small, are reported throughout the planet. The International Day against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia has received official recognition from several States, international institutions such as the European Parliament, and by countless local authorities. Most United Nations agencies also mark the Day with specific events. Even if every year a “global focus issue” is promoted, the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia is not one centralised campaign; rather it is a moment that everyone can take advantage of to take action, on whatever issue and in whatever format that they wish. Many different entities participate in the global mobilisation around May 17 and as a consequence it receives many different names. Some organisations add Lesbophobia or Intersexphobia as distinct focuses. Acronyms also vary, from the initial IDAHO to IDAHOT or IDAHOBIT. The Day is not one central trademarked brand and everyone is free to communicate as they wish. Nevertheless, we have seen lately that several groups translate the “I” with “intersexism”. We have consulted with Intersex organisations who consider this term to be vague and misleading. We therefore ask everyone to please refrain from using the term “intersexism” and prefer the term “intersexphobia”. Please also note that the name of the Day currently does not explicitly include Intersexphobia as there is no global consensus among the Intersex communities that this should be included in the remit of May 17. Initially managed by the IDAHO Committee, the initiative is now collectively managed in collaboration between regional and thematic networks working to advance the rights of people with diverse sexual orientations, gender identities or expressions, and sex characteristics. This collaboration brings together organizations and initiatives at global, regional, national and local levels.
·may17.org·
May17.org
National LGBTQ Task Force
National LGBTQ Task Force
We are building a future where everyone can be free to be their entire selves in every aspect of their lives.
·thetaskforce.org·
National LGBTQ Task Force
OutHistory
OutHistory
OutHistory was founded in October 2008 by Jonathan Ned Katz, author of Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (1976), Gay/Lesbian Almanac: A New Documentary (1983), The Invention of Heterosexuality (1995), Love Stories: Sex Between Men Before Heterosexuality (2001), The Daring Life and Dangerous Times of Eve Adams (2021), and other works on the history of sexuality and gender.
·outhistory.org·
OutHistory
PFLAG
PFLAG
PFLAG is creating a caring, just, and affirming world for LGBTQ+ people and those who love them.
·pflag.org·
PFLAG
Where We Stand: LGBTQ+ Rights
Where We Stand: LGBTQ+ Rights
AAUW supports the civil rights of all individuals and opposes all forms of discrimination, including discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation.
·aauw.org·
Where We Stand: LGBTQ+ Rights
Tucson Gay + Museum|Founded 1967|Tucson Phoenix Arizona Gay Lesbian LGBTQIA+ Museum Historical Archives|Tucson Observer Archives|Yuma Flagstaff LGBTQ Gay Lesbian History Archives Collection| Arizona Phoenix Tucson Bisexual Transgendered Queer LGBTQIA+ Museum Archives
Tucson Gay + Museum|Founded 1967|Tucson Phoenix Arizona Gay Lesbian LGBTQIA+ Museum Historical Archives|Tucson Observer Archives|Yuma Flagstaff LGBTQ Gay Lesbian History Archives Collection| Arizona Phoenix Tucson Bisexual Transgendered Queer LGBTQIA+ Museum Archives
Tucson Gay + Museum|Tucson Phoenix Arizona Gay Lesbian LGBTQIA+ Museum Historical Archives|Tucson Observer Archives|Yuma Flagstaff LGBTQ Gay Lesbian History Archives Collection| Arizona Phoenix Tucson Bisexual Transgendered Queer LGBTQIA+ Museum Archives
·tucsongaymuseum.org·
Tucson Gay + Museum|Founded 1967|Tucson Phoenix Arizona Gay Lesbian LGBTQIA+ Museum Historical Archives|Tucson Observer Archives|Yuma Flagstaff LGBTQ Gay Lesbian History Archives Collection| Arizona Phoenix Tucson Bisexual Transgendered Queer LGBTQIA+ Museum Archives
Speak now : marriage equality on trial : the story of Hollingsworth v. Perry - Kenji Yoshino
Speak now : marriage equality on trial : the story of Hollingsworth v. Perry - Kenji Yoshino
"A renowned legal scholar tells the definitive story of Hollingsworth v. Perry, the trial that will stand as the most potent argument for marriage equality. In 2008, California voters passed Proposition 8, rescinding the right of same-sex couples to marry in the state. Advocates for marriage equality were outraged. Still, major gay-rights groups opposed a federal challenge to the law, warning that it would be dangerously premature. A loss could set the movement back for decades. A small group of activists, however, refused to wait. They turned to corporate lawyers Ted Olson and David Boies--best known for arguing opposite sides of Bush v. Gore--who filed a groundbreaking federal suit against the law. A distinguished constitutional law scholar, Kenji Yoshino was also a newly married gay man who at first felt ambivalent about the suit. Nonetheless, he recognized that Chief Judge Vaughn Walker's decision to hold a trial in the case was momentous. Boies and Olson rose to the occasion, deftly deploying arguments that LGBT advocates had honed through years of litigation and debate. Reading the 3,000-page transcript, Yoshino discovered a shining civil rights document--the most rigorous and compelling exploration he had seen of the nature of marriage, the political status of gays and lesbians, the ideal circumstances for raising children, and the inability of direct democracy to protect fundamental rights. After that tense twelve-day trial, Walker issued a resounding and historic ruling: California's exclusion of same-sex couples from civil marriage violated the U.S. Constitution. In June 2013, the United States Supreme Court denied the final appeal in Hollingsworth v. Perry, leaving same-sex couples in California free to marry. Drawing on interviews with lawyers and witnesses on both sides of the case, Yoshino takes us deep inside the trial. He brings the legal arguments to life, not only through his account of the case, but also by sharing his own story of finding love, marrying, and having children. Vivid, compassionate, and beautifully written, Speak Now is both a nuanced and authoritative account of a landmark trial, and a testament to how the clash of proofs in our judicial process can force debates to the ultimate level of clarity"--
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Speak now : marriage equality on trial : the story of Hollingsworth v. Perry - Kenji Yoshino
Equal before the law : how Iowa led Americans to marriage equality - Tom Witosky; Marc Hansen
Equal before the law : how Iowa led Americans to marriage equality - Tom Witosky; Marc Hansen
"We've been together in sickness and in health, through the death of his mother, through the adoption of our children, through four long years of this legal battle," Jason Morgan told reporters of himself and his partner, Chuck Swaggerty. "And if being together through all of that isn't love and commitment or isn't family or isn't marriage, then I don't know what is." Just minutes earlier on that day, April 3, 2009, the justices of the Iowa Supreme Court had agreed. The court's decision in Varnum v. Brien made Iowa only the third state in the nation to permit same-sex couples to wed--moderate, midwestern Iowa, years before such left-leaning coastal states as California and New York. And unlike the earlier decisions in Massachusetts and Connecticut, Varnum v. Brien was unanimous and unequivocal. It catalyzed the unprecedented and rapid shift in law and public opinion that continues today. Equal Before the Law tells the stories behind this critical battle in the fight for marriage equality and traces the decision's impact. The struggle began in 1998 with the easy passage of Iowa's Defense of Marriage Act and took a turn, surprising to many, in 2005, when six ordinary Iowa couples signed on to Lambda Legal's suit against the law. Their triumph in 2009 sparked a conservative backlash against the supreme court justices, three of whom faced tough retention elections that fall. Longtime, award-winning reporters Tom Witosky and Marc Hansen talked with and researched dozens of key figures, including opponent Bob Vander Plaats, proponents Janelle Rettig and Sharon Malheiro, attorneys Roger Kuhle, Dennis Johnson, and Camilla Taylor, and politicians Matt McCoy, Mary Lundby, and Tom Vilsack, who had to weigh their careers against their convictions. Justice Mark Cady, who wrote the decision, explains why the court had to rule in favor of the plaintiffs. At the center of the story are the six couples who sacrificed their privacy to demand public respect for their families. Through these voices, Witosky and Hansen show that no one should have been surprised by the 2009 decision. Iowans have a long history of leadership on civil rights. Just a year after Iowa became a state, its citizens adopted as their motto the phrase, "Our liberties we prize and our rights we will maintain." And they still do today.
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Equal before the law : how Iowa led Americans to marriage equality - Tom Witosky; Marc Hansen
Bill Would Allow Students to Opt Out of LGBT Curriculum
Bill Would Allow Students to Opt Out of LGBT Curriculum
A Tennessee Senate panel has advanced legislation requiring school districts to alert parents of any instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity, allowing them to opt their student out of such instruction.
·usnews.com·
Bill Would Allow Students to Opt Out of LGBT Curriculum
Case preview: Court will tackle dispute involving religious foster-care agency, LGBTQ rights - SCOTUSblog
Case preview: Court will tackle dispute involving religious foster-care agency, LGBTQ rights - SCOTUSblog
This article is the first entry in a symposium previewing Fulton v. City of Philadelphia. In the past five years, the Supreme Court has ruled that the Constitution guarantees a right to same-sex marriage and that federal employment discrimination laws protect LGBTQ employees. On Nov. 4, the justi
·scotusblog.com·
Case preview: Court will tackle dispute involving religious foster-care agency, LGBTQ rights - SCOTUSblog
United States v. Windsor
United States v. Windsor
A case in which the Court found that the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) was unconstitutional under the equal protection clause of the Fifth Amendment.
·oyez.org·
United States v. Windsor
Lawrence v. Texas
Lawrence v. Texas
A case in which the Court found that a Texas statute banning consenting homosexual adults from engaging in sexual acts violated the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of equal protection.
·oyez.org·
Lawrence v. Texas
Bowers v. Hardwick
Bowers v. Hardwick
A case in which the Court held that there was no constitutional protection for sodomy, and that states could outlaw its practice.
·oyez.org·
Bowers v. Hardwick
House Approves Equality Act, 224-206
House Approves Equality Act, 224-206
The House debates and approves (224-206) the Equality Act, which would ban discrimination against LGBTQ Americans.
·c-span.org·
House Approves Equality Act, 224-206
Obergefell v. Hodges
Obergefell v. Hodges
A case in which the Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment requires states to license and recognize same-sex marriage.
·oyez.org·
Obergefell v. Hodges