Tracing Social and Legal Acceptance of the Transgender Community in Developing Countries

Tracing Social and Legal Acceptance of the Transgender Community in Developing Countries

CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by CONCEPT (E-Journal, Villanova University) CONCEPT, Vol. XXXIX (2016) 1 Third Gender and the Third World: Tracing Social and Legal Acceptance of the Transgender Community in Developing Countries Kimberly Tower Political Science Introduction There is a stereotype in the Global North that asserts its superiority over its less developed neighbors in the South.1 This idea goes beyond technology, economics, education, and health care. Some believe that the Global North is morally more advanced and treats its citizens in a more equal manner. By extension, Global South countries are generalized as “backwards, traditional, [and] oppressive.”2,3 Upon closer examination, this holds no water. There is an “immense variation” in human rights in the developing world that is just as wide-ranging as their “different religious, historical, political and cultural practices.”4 Actually, many of these states are quantifiably more progressive than the West on certain issues. This is particularly true in terms of transgender rights. While the United States is still struggling with the question of which bathrooms transgender people should use, Tehran is one of the global capitals of sex reassignment surgery.56 Some countries have gone so far as to create laws requiring insurance companies to cover medical costs, something that is not even up for debate in many US states (see Table II). 1 Formerly known as the “First World” and “Third World,” respectively, the Global North/South distinction represents the social, economic, and political differences that exist between developed and developing states. 2 La Barbera, Maria Caterina. Identity and Migration in Europe: Multidisciplinary Perspectives. (Dodrecht: Springer, 2015), p. 61. 3 Lambino, Antonio. “Exploiting the Poor Through the Images We Use?” Web log post. People, Spaces, Deliberation. The World Bank, 4 July 2010. Web. 10 Dec. 2015. http://blogs.worldbank.org/publicsphere/exploiting-poor-through-images-we-use 4 Koffman, Ofra. “'The Girl Effect': Stereotyping the Developing World.” Research and Expertise. The London School of Economics and Political Science, 18 Mar. 2014. Web. 10 Dec. 2015. http://www.lse.ac.uk/researchAndExpertise/researchHighlights/socialPolicy/Girl- power.aspx 5 Brynn Tannehill, “Debunking Bathroom Myths,” The Huffington Post, 28 November 2015. 6 Sasha von Oldershausen, “Iran's Sex-Change Operations Provided Nearly Free-Of-Cost,” The Huffington Post, 4 June 2012. CONCEPT, Vol. XXXIX (2016) 2 Yet on the other end, there are Less Developed Countries (LDCs)7 where mainstream society pretends, and sometimes explicitly claims, that transgender people do not exist there. Harassment and violence threaten those who dare to speak out. What causes these radical differences in the developing world? Is it possible to pinpoint the variables that influence the social and legal acceptance of transgenderism? This paper seeks to find precisely that answer. Based on the limited studies and literature available, I hypothesize that the rate of HIV/AIDS, a country’s colonial history, and the legacies of colonial missionaries are all contributing foctors in contemporary attitudes towards the trans*8 community in the Global South (or LDCs.) The Invisible “T” Transgender rights were selected for analysis due to the fact that they receive very little attention, both in activist and scholarly circles. First and foremost, even in societies that perceive gender identity and sexual orientation as a singular movement, the “T” in “LGBT” is often swept to the side. Gay rights tend to be championed as advancements for the entire LGBT community while trans-specific issues are ignored. This was clearly reflected in the many reports that claimed to discuss LGBT rights in the developing world, giving detailed descriptions of the status of marriage equality, same-sex adoption, and anti-discrimination legislation based on sexual orientation, but containing no mention of issues that impact transgender individuals. It was surprisingly difficult to obtain information regarding the accessibility of sex reassignment surgery, hormone replacement therapy, the legal ability to change one’s gender, and legal protections based on gender identity. Second, in many parts of the world, sexual orientation and gender identity are perceived as wholly different entities. It would be illogical to analyze them together. To once more take Iran as an example, transgender individuals enjoy a high degree of social acceptance and are protected by state and religious law; yet homosexuality can be punishable by death. Considering the vast differences that exist in transgender rights across the developing world, this subject is surprisingly understudied and warrants its own investigation. 7 Hereafter referred to as LDCs in the text. 8 Trans* (specifically followed by an asterisk) is an umbrella term meant to signify the wide range of identities that exist on the transgender spectrum: transmen, transwomen, bigender, non- binary, genderfluid, agender, genderqueer, third gender, two-spirit, and so on. There is some debate in the transgender community over the use of this asterisk, and whether “trans*” or the full word “transgender” is more inclusive. Upon the advice of individuals in the transgender community at Villanova, they are used interchangeably in this paper. CONCEPT, Vol. XXXIX (2016) 3 Literature Review The literature on this subject is scattered. As previously mentioned, scholarly work on transgender acceptance is minimal, especially in relation to developing countries. Some sources describe the current situation of the transgender community, and some describe the past, but virtually none draw a link between the two and ask why things are the way they are. Furthermore, there appear to be relatively few works that discuss how colonial moral codes might have a continuing effect on gender today. (Shockingly, even Meredith Weiss’s chapter on “Sexuality Governance in Postcolonial Settings” in Global Homophobia: States, Movements, and the Politics of Oppression (2013), failed in this regard.) As a result, this project seeks to fill a rather sizeable gap. It will ultimately contribute to a wide range of fields, most notably comparative politics, human rights literature, gender studies, and postcolonial studies. By and large, sources were consulted on a country-by-country basis. Queer Bangkok: Twenty-First-Century Markets, Media and Rights (Jackson 2011) was essential in understanding the complex attitudes towards the transgender community in Thailand; similarly, “Verdicts of Science, Rulings of Faith” (Najmabadi 2011) and Scott Siraj al-Haqq Kugle’s Living Out in Islam: Voices of Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender Muslims (2014) and Homosexuality in Islam: Critical Reflection on Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender Muslims (2010) laid the contemporary and historical foundations for Iran; With Respect to Sex: Negotiating Hijra Identity in South India (Reddy 2005) and Neither Man nor Woman: The Hijras of India by Nanda (Nanda 1990) described India; Out in Africa: Same-Sex Desire in Sub-Saharan Literatures & Cultures (Zabus 2013) and the five-volume Encyclopedia of Africa (Gates, Appiah 2005) were the primary sources for Kenya, Uganda, and Senegal; the Encyclopedia of Queer Myth, Symbol, and Spirit : Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Lore (Sparks, Anzaldúa 1998) provided important background on transgenderism in Haitian voodoo traditions; and “‘Con Discriminación y Represión No Hay Democracia’: The Lesbian and Gay Movement in Argentina” (Brown 2010) gave a brief summary of the history of the LGBT movement in Argentina and nearby Latin American countries. Where dedicated scholarly works could not be found (Nepal, Ecuador), news articles had to fill in missing information. Methodology: Cases and Variables This project will adopt a “large-N” analytical approach, looking at a large number of cases in an attempt to find a wider causal pattern. Ten countries will be CONCEPT, Vol. XXXIX (2016) 4 included: Iran, Nepal, India, Thailand, Uganda, Kenya, Senegal, Haiti, Ecuador, and Argentina. Despite their economic similarities, each case has a diverse social and political history, which should help to isolate common variables. Furthermore, at least one country from each region of the Global South is being represented. Based on these parameters, we know where we are studying, but we are still unclear on what we are studying. A concept as broad and multifaceted as “transgender acceptance” cannot be analyzed on its face. As such, this concept was broken down into social and legal dimensions, which still require further definition. Social acceptance can be quantified as: • The existence of a national discourse on transgenderism (whether it is something people can openly talk about); • The presence of transgenderism in pop culture (movies, films, literature, TV shows, celebrities); • The visibility of activist groups (whether there has been at least one major news story about a transgender activist group in the past year); • The visibility of anti-trans* groups (with similar requirements as above). Similarly, legal acceptance was operationalized as: • The availability of hormone replacement therapy and sex reassignment surgery;9 • The presence and extent of anti-discrimination legislation; • The ability to change one’s gender on legal documents. Each of these factors will be assigned a numerical value and scored, giving us a quantitative understanding of the levels of transgender acceptance

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