Nearly a century ago, the Supreme Court sanctioned compulsory sterilization in Buck v. Bell, echoing eugenicists and reasoning that “[i]t is better for all the world . . . [if] society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind.” In addition to this eugenics-based rationale, compulsory sterilization in the early twentieth century also sought to punish and stigmatize LGBTQ persons, who were called “sexual deviants.” Today, at least fourteen states and one territory continue to—in effect—involuntarily sterilize transgender individuals. In these states, transgender individuals must undergo sex-reassignment surgery before they can correct the gender on their birth certificates. This Article argues that like many o...
This Article is composed of four Parts. The first Part explores two legal struggles for intersex and...
Recent U.S. decisions establishing a person\u27s legal sex have adopted a kaleidoscope of approaches...
This Article focuses on stereotypes and examines discrimination cases in the United States. In sex d...
Nearly a century ago, the Supreme Court sanctioned compulsory sterilization in Buck v. Bell, echoing...
Across the country, laws governing corrections to gender markers on birth certificates are relativel...
This note analyzes Gore, et al., v. Lee, et al., a case challenging Tennessee\u27s birth control pol...
Current medical constructions of trans identities reflect heterosexist understandings of gender expr...
This article argues that at present, there is not sufficient certainty within the medical and scient...
In 2004, the Victorian Government enacted legislation allowing people treated for transsexualism to ...
The vast majority of trans people around the world cannot obtain legal recognition of—or official do...
This article examines the rationale of the continuing Finnish transgender sterilization requirement ...
Babies born with sex characteristics that do not “fit typical binary notions of male or female” are ...
Between 1927 and 1974, over 50,000 Americans deemed socially inadequate were involuntarily sterilize...
Compulsory sterilization on non-criminal grounds is provided for by statute in twenty-six states. In...
In December of 2014, the First Circuit Court of Appealsheld, en banc, that the Massachusetts Departm...
This Article is composed of four Parts. The first Part explores two legal struggles for intersex and...
Recent U.S. decisions establishing a person\u27s legal sex have adopted a kaleidoscope of approaches...
This Article focuses on stereotypes and examines discrimination cases in the United States. In sex d...
Nearly a century ago, the Supreme Court sanctioned compulsory sterilization in Buck v. Bell, echoing...
Across the country, laws governing corrections to gender markers on birth certificates are relativel...
This note analyzes Gore, et al., v. Lee, et al., a case challenging Tennessee\u27s birth control pol...
Current medical constructions of trans identities reflect heterosexist understandings of gender expr...
This article argues that at present, there is not sufficient certainty within the medical and scient...
In 2004, the Victorian Government enacted legislation allowing people treated for transsexualism to ...
The vast majority of trans people around the world cannot obtain legal recognition of—or official do...
This article examines the rationale of the continuing Finnish transgender sterilization requirement ...
Babies born with sex characteristics that do not “fit typical binary notions of male or female” are ...
Between 1927 and 1974, over 50,000 Americans deemed socially inadequate were involuntarily sterilize...
Compulsory sterilization on non-criminal grounds is provided for by statute in twenty-six states. In...
In December of 2014, the First Circuit Court of Appealsheld, en banc, that the Massachusetts Departm...
This Article is composed of four Parts. The first Part explores two legal struggles for intersex and...
Recent U.S. decisions establishing a person\u27s legal sex have adopted a kaleidoscope of approaches...
This Article focuses on stereotypes and examines discrimination cases in the United States. In sex d...