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Transgender Trend
This year has been very busy for us. We have spent a lot of time liaising with journalists and broadcasters, being interviewed and contributing to articles, some of which were published, some of which weren’t. We have written many letters, some of complaint (including to the World Health Organisation and all the health organisations involved with the new Memorandum of Understanding on Conversion Therapy) and some thanking commentators for contributing to the debate in the media. We contributed a submission to the NHS consultation on gender identity services and we have spoken to and written to many parents who have contacted us through the website.
As well as Transgender Law Concerns, we spoke at the event What Is Gender? at the Grand Hotel in Brighton next door to the Labour Party Conference in September which was very well received by an enthusiastic audience.
Photo: l – r Grottie Lockett, Ruth Serwotka, Julia Long, Stephanie Davies-Arai
We attended the NUT event ‘Is Your Brain Pink or Blue?’ in January, the conference ‘Hot Topics in Child Health‘ in June, the NHS Public Consultation in September, the Tavistock clinic AGM in October as well as attending various meetings throughout the year. We secured two meetings with the Equality & Human Rights Commission, one with Julia Long on the proposed GRA reforms and one with a group of parents and professionals on the government transgender guidance for schools, and a meeting with the Fawcett Society, together with Julia Long, in November. We continue to follow up on this work.
A major project this year has been the design and writing of comprehensive schools guidance which is now finished and ready to launch early in the New Year.
We took part in an international Skype interview with Dr Oren Amitay in December, together with Jungian analyst Lisa Marchiano, which can be viewed here in two parts:
Part 1
We contributed a chapter to a very important book (here) which is the highlight of our year so we have left it till last. ‘Transgender Children and Young People: Born in Your Own Body’ was published by Cambridge Scholars in November and we think it is a groundbreaking contribution to the cause of critiquing the medical transition of children. Our taster of the chapter contents is here. We would like to thank all contributors for their excellent chapters, the editors Heather Brunskell-Evans and Michele Moore for their vision and all the work they have done to secure publication and Cambridge Scholars for their faith in the project.