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TRANSnetwork

Transgender Health and Education Collaborative in the Southern US

Transgender Health and Education Collaborative in the Southern US

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About TRANSnetwork

Trans Health Research & Advocacy Network in the South (TRANSnetwork) is a diverse collaborative of trans, non-binary, and gender non-conforming (TNBGNC) community members, as well as academic researchers and healthcare providers in Arkansas, Georgia, North Carolina, and Louisiana.

 

We are working together to improve the health and well-being of TNBGNC people in the South. We work with TNBGNC people who live in under-resourced communities and those  more affected by intersecting forms of oppression such as trans-prejudice, racism, xenophobia, classism, and ableism. 

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Sustainability

We must make sure that we can keep working toward our mission.

 

To do so we must:
 

  • Take good care of ourselves. If we are not feeling well, then we cannot do  our part to help others.
     

  • Connect with things and people that boost our energy and help us feel like ourselves.
     

  • Find joy in our work if we want to keep it up. 

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Liberation

We want to help TNBGNC people to feel free to be themselves.

 

We try to do this by:

  • Reinforcing the right for TNBGNC people to have control over their choices in life. 

  • Modeling for others that no one group or viewpoint should have power over others. 

  • Embracing that southern culture does not have one set of cultural norms. Being queer and TNBGNC is a part of southern culture. 

  • Actively condemning and combatting systemic and individual-level racism through learning about and engaging in anti-racism practices.

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Intersectionality

We all have many identities and interlocking systems of  oppression influence the health of TNBGNC people (e.g. racism, classism,  sexism, xenophobia). 

  • Together these identities and interlocking systems of oppression may create greater advantages (privileges) or disadvantages (discrimination  and oppression). 

  • Those with more experiences of interlocking oppression should be at the center of our concern (Black and Brown TNBGNC people, TNBGNC  people with disabilities, indigenous TNBGNC people, etc.)

 

  • We will avoid a narrow focus on any one aspect of identity at the expense of a wider perspective.

  • We will aim for “radical inclusivity,” actively and intentionally welcoming people who may often be excluded. 

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Recognition, Collaboration, and Capacity Building

We want to celebrate, build on, and support the work that has already been done by others in our community.

 

Accessible Communication: We want our communication to be easy for everyone to understand. To do so we must make sure that information:

  • Avoids jargon related to research

  • Medical care is provided in the language that people speak (i.e., Spanish and French language resources)

  • Includes methods (such as video captioning and image descriptions for  assistive reading devices) to make them user-friendly and accessible for  those with disabilities

  • Uses language that focuses first on the person rather than on their disability

Beliefs & Values

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Newsletter Archive

FINDINGS

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Read summaries of our research findings, full publications, or watch webinars related to our work.

RESOURCES

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View culturally competent resources related to LGBTQ health.

GET INVOLVED

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Fill out an interest form if you'd like to join the Community Advisory Board or if you're a student interested in working with us.

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