Anti-trans bills and executive orders are reshaping campus life in Arizona
Lawmakers across the country are introducing anti-trans bills at increasing rates. Members of ASU's queer community say this has left them feeling unsafe and vulnerable.
Lawmakers across the country are introducing anti-trans bills at increasing rates. Members of ASU's queer community say this has left them feeling unsafe and vulnerable.
Yet another casualty of Arizona’s Republican legislative majority: a license plate benefitting an LGBTQ organization.
Rep. Nick Kupper quickly moved to block his own bill that aimed to restrict the display of all but a few specific flags on government property, bringing First Amendment violation concerns.
Arizona’s public school allies are tired of bearing the brunt of right-wing political attacks and are calling on elected leaders to protect students.
Bills limiting students' pronoun and bathroom usage are being considered for the fourth year in a row in Arizona’s State House.
Multiple anti-LGBTQ bills have advanced through Arizona’s legislature, attempting to place rigid definitions of sex in Arizona state law and ban pride flags from government property.
Sen. John Kavanagh, who was the first legislator in the country to propose a bathroom bill in 2013, brings similar bills back for another legislative session — this time he’s confident he can get them on the ballot.
LGBTQ advocacy organizations are expecting attacks on the trans and queer community to continue, and potentially worsen during Arizona’s legislative session.
Reading assignments in public schools for books like The Great Gatsby and To Kill a Mockingbird now come with a permission slip, as they’ve been designated as “sexually explicit.”
When he needed it most, Elliot Gilreath found love and support at an LGBTQ+ youth center in Phoenix. Now, he’s paying it forward to the next generation.