identité
Washington (AFP) - A US federal judge on Wednesday temporarily blocked a law in the state of Arkansas that denies transgender minors access to hormonal treatments or surgical operations. Judge James Moody in federal court in Little Rock, Arkansas granted the plaintiffs -- four transgender youths, their parents and two doctors -- a preliminary injunction stopping the law from coming into effect until a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the measure has been resolved. "We are going to fight this law, as far and as long as we need to, to make sure that no young person in Arkansas has to...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - The US Supreme Court on Monday handed a final victory to a transgender student who fought for years to use the boys' bathroom at his high school. The highest US court refused to hear an appeal brought by Virginia school officials opposed to allowing transgender teenagers to use the bathroom reflecting their identity. As is customary, the court did not give reasons for its decision, but two of its nine justices -- both of them conservatives -- said they would have accepted the appeal. The decision leaves in place a federal appeals court ruling last summer in favor of Gavin ...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - On soccer fields, in locker rooms and even at the doctor's office, the rights of US transgender youths have become a political lightning rod, with dozens of recent bills attempting to dictate their fate in conservative states. "It's devastating to think that someone that doesn't know me is telling me how to live my life," said Dylan Brandt, a 15-year-old from Arkansas, who began testosterone treatment eight months ago. The result was an instantaneous "boost in my happiness, in my confidence," said the blond-haired, blue-eyed boy, who recently celebrated the changes, most not...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - The US Supreme Court on Monday upheld a policy in Oregon public schools that allowed transgender students to use the bathrooms and locker rooms matching their gender identity. The nation's highest court, which has six conservative justices out of nine, did not explain why it declined to hear the arguments of the parents contesting the policy, particularly on the grounds of religious arguments or the right to privacy. The decision is the latest episode in the "toilet wars" saga that has raged for several years in the US. Democratic president Barack Obama's administration issu...
AFP
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