Court cases about gay rights
A Term of Injustice: Supreme Court Delivers Unrelenting Break to LGBTQ+ Rights in Series of Rulings
by Aryn Fields •
This legal title, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a devastating series of decisions that collectively erode hard-fought Diverse rights, strip access to essential healthcare, and send a chilling message to queer youth, families, and communities across the country. From the freedom to receive best-practice medical care to the right to an inclusive education that reflect LGBTQ+ lives, the Court’s orders diminish basic protections, reinforce discrimination, and threaten the wellbeing of millions.
The impact of these decisions—across US v. Skrmetti, Mahmoud v. Taylor, and Medina v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic—is sweeping. Together, they create recent barriers to accessing care, compromise inclusive education, and confined the legal avenues available to doubt state abuses. These decisions do not exist in a vacuum. They show up in the midst of a coordinated political campaign to roll back Diverse rights—through federal executive actions, state legislation, school
Active Court Cases that Will Influence the Declare of LGBTQ+ Rights
by Aneesha Pappy •
WASHINGTON—As the LGBTQ+ community continues to face discriminatory legislation across the country, there are also a number of active court cases making their way through the court system that search to either roll advocate these anti-equality laws or expand LGBTQ+ protections. In addition, anti-equality state attorneys general and anti-equality organizations are challenging non-discrimination rules issued by the federal government. Ranging from healthcare to education, these cases address a variety of rights and will possess an important impact on the state of equality for LGBTQ+ Americans.
In order to track these cases and the consequences of their decisions, this background document provides topline information while also illustrating the disturbing range of attacks facing LGBTQ+ people.
Health Care
Bans on Health Care for Transsexual People
- Bans on health protect for transgender youth own been passed in 24 states across the region, with 17 being challenged in state or feder
Introduction Two Supreme Court decisions involving gay rights, one decade apart, have left a lot of people wondering just where the regulation now stands with respect to the right to engage in homosexual conduct.The Court first considered the matter in the case of Bowers v Hardwick, a challenge to a Georgia law authorizing criminal penalties for persons start guilty of sodomy. Although the Georgia law applied both to heterosexual and homosexual sodomy, the Supreme Court chose to think about only the constitutionality of applying the law to homosexual sodomy. (Michael Hardwick, who sought to enjoin enforcement of the Georgia law, had been charged with sodomy after a police officer discovered him in bed with another man. Charges were later dropped.) In Bowers, the Court ruled 5 to 4 that the Due Process Clause "right of privacy" recognized in cases such Griswold and Roe does not prevent the criminalization of homosexual actions between consenting adults. One of the five members of the majority, Justice Powell, later described his vote in the case a
7 Supreme Court Cases That shaped LGBTQ Rights
The LGBTQ movement in America dates help at least as far as the s, when the first documented gay rights organization was founded. The Society for Human Rights only survived for about a year before it was disbanded in , but its mark was left on our country.
Increased visibility and activism of LGBTQ individuals since the s has helped the movement generate progress on multiple fronts. Just as advocates fought their battle in American culture, they also did so in the courts. Here, we look at a few cases that have shaped LGBTQ rights in America and celebrate some of the milestones of the movement.
1) One, Inc. v. Olesen
The first Supreme Court case to consider LGBTQ rights had to do with the First Amendment right to liberty of speech. A publisher released ONE: The Homosexual Magazine, America’s first widely-distributed magazine for gay readers. Not long after publication began, its August and October editions were seized by Los Angeles postmaster Otto Olesen for supposedly violating obscenity laws. In its conclusion, the Supre