Posts tagged latin america
Posts tagged latin america
Argentina JUST PASSED a groundbreaking gender identity bill!!!
From now on, people will be able to change the name and gender on their ID without needing psychiatric permission or any body modifications. Furthermore, anyone who does want hormones or surgery will be able to access them for free through the public and private health system.
It was passed unanimously today by the Senate :-D
Video a favor de los derechos reproductivos trans. Producido por la OTD de Chile (Organización de Transexuales por la Dignidad de la Diversidad).
Chilean PSA for trans people’s reproductive rights
(Source: youtube.com)
Video —presentado hoy en el Senado de la Nación— promoviendo la Ley de identidad de género en Argentina
PSA for trans rights presented in the Argentinean Senate this week (they’re about to pass a comprehensive gender identity bill)
(Source: vimeo.com)
La Cámara baja aprobó la denominada “Ley de Identidad de Género”
¡Vamos Argentina! La Cámara de Diputadxs le dio media sanción a esta ley con 167 votos a favor, 17 en contra y 7 abstenciones. Sólo falta la aprobación del Senado.
(En el link puede leerse el texto de la ley.)
The lower chamber of the Argentinean Congress passed the gender identity bill mentioned earlier today (167 votes in favor, 17 against, 7 abstentions). If the Senate approves, it’ll officially become law!
As we wrote before, this law would allow trans people to change their gender marker & name without needing any sort of medical/psychological permission or body modifications. Also, if it passes, hormones and surgery will be covered by health insurance and public hospitals.
En el link puede verse la sesión de la Cámara de Diputadxs que está dándose en este mismo momento.
Right now, Argentina’s Congress is discussing a groundbreaking gender identity law which would allow trans people to change their gender marker & name without any sort of medical/psychological permission and without needing body modifications. Also, if it passes, hormones and surgery would be covered by health insurance and public hospitals.
Watch the discussion at the link above (in Spanish).
Edit: YES, it was approved by this chamber of Congress! Now it has to pass the Senate before officially becoming a law.
Recommendation: Ney Matogrosso — Genderfork
Ney MatogrossoNey Matogrosso is a gay Brazilian singer who first became popular in the ’70s. At the time, being gay was considered taboo in Brazil, so he never officially came out. Nevertheless, he didn’t let the conservative values of the country hold him back. He had a stage personality more flamboyant than Elton John and Liberace combined, and it came complete with outlandish costumes and hip shaking only a Brazilian can pull off.
Most impressive of all is that at 79, he is still just as fabulous today as he was all those years ago. As a Brazilian, I could not be prouder to have a musician such as him representing my country.
The 15 July last year was a historic day for equality in Latin America. Argentina was the first country in the region to legalise same-sex marriage. People took to the streets in celebration after a long vigil in front of congress. The law, sponsored by the government of the president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, was the result of a long and arduous campaign by LGBTQ organisations and allies against conservative sectors led by the Catholic church.
Although it has not drawn as many international headlines, 18 August 2011 was yet another historic day for equality. The Argentinian congress began the debates for a proposed gender identity law. If passed, this law would allow transgender people to correct their names and gender on all legal documents, including birth certificates, IDs and passports through a quick procedure.
According to first-hand accounts in local media, never before have there been so many trans activists in a congressional debate session. The debates have been set in motion by four different projects, each supported by a group of legislators and NGOs, each of them with a slightly different approach to providing a legal framework for identity issues that are currently addressed through court procedures that leave the final decision in the hands of judges and magistrates. The main differences between projects are based on healthcare services for those who wish to undertake hormone and/or surgeries as part of the transition processes.
If congress approves one of these four projects, the gender identity law would be another landmark in Argentina’s efforts for LGBTQ equality. This path was initiated in 2007, when, in a meeting sponsored by Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, the Yogyakarta Principles were launched as a global charter for gay rights at the United Nations human rights council. Due to resistance of several member states where homosexuality and gender identity are penalised, the principles have not yet been adopted worldwide. However, those initial accomplishments paved the way for Argentina’s deep social changes, which resulted in same sex marriage and could possibly grant trans people the right to recognition of their identities.
Argentinian LGBT Federation (FALGBT), together with ATTA (Asociación de Travestis, Transexuales y Transgéneros de Argentina), launched a media campaign to raise awareness of the proposed law and garner public support. The campaign, which includes videos and brochures, emphasises the recognition of gender identity without the need of medicalisation and the subsequent involvement of psychiatric or surgical procedures. Instead, their aim is the depathologisation of trans identities and the elimination of gender-related matters from the realm of psychiatry and the legal system. This campaign has also benefited from the recent high-profile case of Florencia Trinidad, a popular comedian who not only successfully exercised her right to identity through a verypublicised court case but also married her long-term partner and became a mother of twins through surrogacy last week.
(via pansexualpride)
Yesterday (August 18th), the Argentinian Congress began a debate on a proposed gender identity law.
If passed, this law would allow anyone to correct hir name, gender and image registration in all public records through a quick and simple procedure.
Currently, trans people who wish to obtain a government ID with their true gender and name must wait years for a judges ruling, often being denied and forced to go through a lengthy and costly appeals process.
In preparation, the Argentinian Federation of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans people (FALGBT) and the ATTTA (Asociación de Travestis, Transexuales y Transgéneros de Argentina) launched earlier last week, the campaign “Identidad: Derecho a ser” (“Identity: The right to be” in English).The above video is one of the ads campaigning that the law be passed.
Traducción:
El 18 de agosto, el Congreso argentino comenzó el debate sobre una posible ley de identidad de género.
Si fuera aprobada, esta ley permitiría que cualquier persona corrigiera su nombre, género e imagen, en todos los documentos públicos, mediante un procedimiento rápido y sencillo.
En la actualidad, las personas trans que desean obtener un documento de identidad con su nombre y género verdaderos debe esperar años por un pronunciamiento judicial; muchas veces su pedido es denegado y deben comenzar una apelación larga y costosa.
En preparación, la Federación Argentina LGBT (FALGBT) y ATTTA (Asociación de Travestis, Transexuales y Transgéneros de Argentina) lanzó la campaña “Identidad: Derecho a Ser”.
Este video forma parte de la campaña por la aprobación de la ley.
(Nota: en realidad hay varias leyes en discusión —incluyendo una de la FALGBT/ATTA— que difieren en cuanto a patologización/no-patologización, edad mínima, cobertura de operaciones/hormonas por hospitales públicos y obras sociales, etc.)
Argentina: Transgender rights bill campaign
this video is so great! :D
So great and so beautiful