In 2017 a surprising development took place in an African nation with no lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (LGBT) rights or protections to speak of. In two separate cases, one involving a transgender man and the other a transgender woman, the Botswana High Court ruled in favour of the two litigants. The rulings allowed each to have their gender markers on their identity documents adjusted. This was a historical first on the African continent. This paper explores how this came to pass. Providing a close reading of the Botswana cases I contend that, perhaps surprisingly, the law though crucial, seems to function as simply the final decision-making tool at the judges' disposal. Drawing on interviews undertaken with both litigants and their...
Within the heterogenous global prison population of about 11.7 million, transgender prisoners have u...
African sexualities are dynamic, multi-faceted and resilient. However, people with non-heterosexual ...
Within the South African context some people may experience a gender identity of the ot...
Botswana has seen a steady rise in progressive decisions on the rights of LGBTI persons. Most marke...
This mini-dissertation is a critical analysis of the judgment in ND v Attorney General and the Regis...
This Article argues for the adoption of a gender-based framework to supplement rights promotion stra...
The topic seeks to investigate the legal recognition of intersex persons in Botswana. The researcher...
Individuals engaging in same-sex acts, individuals identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende...
Researchers such as Hoad (2007), Ndashe (2010), Swarr (2012) and Matebeni (2014) have raised critica...
The international human rights system has formalised the evolution and normalisation of equal dignit...
This dissertation will attempt to answer question whether, in terms of the right to dignity in s10 a...
Transgender individuals across nations have been subjected to a range of restrictive barriers, which...
The use of strategic litigation (SL) to stimulate social change in Common Law Africa in respect of ...
Transgender communities are always considered not part of the citizenship project. The recent Suprem...
Within the heterogenous global prison population of about 11.7 million, transgender prisoners have u...
Within the heterogenous global prison population of about 11.7 million, transgender prisoners have u...
African sexualities are dynamic, multi-faceted and resilient. However, people with non-heterosexual ...
Within the South African context some people may experience a gender identity of the ot...
Botswana has seen a steady rise in progressive decisions on the rights of LGBTI persons. Most marke...
This mini-dissertation is a critical analysis of the judgment in ND v Attorney General and the Regis...
This Article argues for the adoption of a gender-based framework to supplement rights promotion stra...
The topic seeks to investigate the legal recognition of intersex persons in Botswana. The researcher...
Individuals engaging in same-sex acts, individuals identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende...
Researchers such as Hoad (2007), Ndashe (2010), Swarr (2012) and Matebeni (2014) have raised critica...
The international human rights system has formalised the evolution and normalisation of equal dignit...
This dissertation will attempt to answer question whether, in terms of the right to dignity in s10 a...
Transgender individuals across nations have been subjected to a range of restrictive barriers, which...
The use of strategic litigation (SL) to stimulate social change in Common Law Africa in respect of ...
Transgender communities are always considered not part of the citizenship project. The recent Suprem...
Within the heterogenous global prison population of about 11.7 million, transgender prisoners have u...
Within the heterogenous global prison population of about 11.7 million, transgender prisoners have u...
African sexualities are dynamic, multi-faceted and resilient. However, people with non-heterosexual ...
Within the South African context some people may experience a gender identity of the ot...