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<h2 align="center"><em>'''DID YOU KNOW?'''</em></h2>
 
<h2 align="center"><em>'''DID YOU KNOW?'''</em></h2>
<h3 align="center">'''Mental Health Advocates from the LGBTQ Community'''</h3>
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<h3 align="center">'''Anti-Bulling Activists from the LGBTQ Community'''</h3>
[[File:lgbthealth.png|250px|link=Mental Health Advocates from the LGBTQ Community]]
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[[File:bullying.jpg|250px|Anti-Bullying Activists from the LGBTQ Community]]
  
<p>Mental disorders are now recognized as a leading health issue in today's world.  This has not always been the case as the stigma of mental health isolated many and society shied away from support.  The World Health Organization reported that in 2019 one in every 8 individuals, or 970 million people, lived with a mental disorder.  These range from anxiety, eating disorders, and depression to post-traumatic stress, neurodevelopment disorders, and schizophrenia.</p>
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<p>There is widespread acceptance of the fact that LGBTQ individuals are at an increased risk of being bullied.</p>
  
<p>Socio-economic factors play a big role in determining the mental health of the LGBTQ community. These include social inclusion, freedom from discrimination and violence, and economic stability and well-being. All of these are challenges faced by the LGBTQ community, as they are by most minority groups.  The American Psychiatric Association reports that LGBTQ individuals are more than twice as likely as heterosexual men and women to have a mental disorder in their lifetime - half have experienced depression,
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<p>Physical and verbal bullying is especially evident for LGBTQ students in schools. Many youth in the LGBTQ community report not going to school based on a fear of being bullied. This behaviour puts these students at risk for anxiety and depression, suicide, increased drug and alcohol use, and lower economic and social status because they drop out of school. A survey by Stomp Out Bullying reported that 9 out of 10 LGBTQ youth report being bullied at school.</p>
and three in five have experienced anxiety.</p>
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<p>Mental health challenges are particularly prevalent in the transgender community.  Lack of support from friends and family engender feelings of isolation and transgender individuals continually face threats of physical violence and harm, bias, discrimination, prejudice, and more.</p>
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<p>Cyberbullying is when someone uses technology to harass, threaten, embarrass, or target another person. This behaviour is also occurring more frequently with the same results.</p>
  
<p>A key advance in the progress of the LGBTQ community and mental health has been the declassification of homosexuality as a mental illness. Gay individuals [[Richard Green]] and [[John Richard Nichols]] were at the forefront of this activism in the United States.  Other countries have followed their lead.  Of pressing concern to the community now is the banning of conversion therapy.</p>
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<p>Many organizations and programs have been created to address bullying toward the LGBTQ community. The Trevor Project and GLSEN in the United States are perhaps the most prominent of the organizations, and Kids Helplines are an example of a specific program that is highly successful.</p>
  
<p>There are many LGBTQ psychologists and psychiatrists on our list. Others are activists, politicians, charity leaders, writers, and health administrators. We have identified notable LGBTQ mental health advocates from Australia, Canada, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Ireland, New Zealand, Somalia, and The United States.  To read more and see the complete list, click '''[[Mental Health Advocates from the LGBTQ Community|HERE]]'''</p>
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<p>Students and school officials have responded by creating schools' Gay-Straight Alliance (GSA) groups. Faculty advisors have been appointed as a resource for the students. Strict anti-bullying policies have been created and enforced, and resources have been put in place to support LGBTQ youth. There is a marked reduction in bullying reported by students when such programs have been put in place.</p>
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<p>Adult bullying and harassment is a growing occurrence. Personal insults, aggressive behaviour, threats, public shaming, and unwanted personal contact can be evidence of this. There are similar mental and physical outcomes for victims as are experienced by bullied youth.</p>
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<p>We have identified several LGBTQ individuals advocating against bullying toward the community.  To read more and see the complete list, click '''[[Anti-Bullying Activists from the LGBTQ Community|HERE]]'''</p>
  
 
'''Directory of past 'Did You Know?' Articles''' [[Past 'Did You Know?' Articles|See Here]]
 
'''Directory of past 'Did You Know?' Articles''' [[Past 'Did You Know?' Articles|See Here]]

Latest revision as of 01:43, 18 November 2024

DID YOU KNOW?

Anti-Bulling Activists from the LGBTQ Community

Anti-Bullying Activists from the LGBTQ Community

There is widespread acceptance of the fact that LGBTQ individuals are at an increased risk of being bullied.

Physical and verbal bullying is especially evident for LGBTQ students in schools. Many youth in the LGBTQ community report not going to school based on a fear of being bullied. This behaviour puts these students at risk for anxiety and depression, suicide, increased drug and alcohol use, and lower economic and social status because they drop out of school. A survey by Stomp Out Bullying reported that 9 out of 10 LGBTQ youth report being bullied at school.

Cyberbullying is when someone uses technology to harass, threaten, embarrass, or target another person. This behaviour is also occurring more frequently with the same results.

Many organizations and programs have been created to address bullying toward the LGBTQ community. The Trevor Project and GLSEN in the United States are perhaps the most prominent of the organizations, and Kids Helplines are an example of a specific program that is highly successful.

Students and school officials have responded by creating schools' Gay-Straight Alliance (GSA) groups. Faculty advisors have been appointed as a resource for the students. Strict anti-bullying policies have been created and enforced, and resources have been put in place to support LGBTQ youth. There is a marked reduction in bullying reported by students when such programs have been put in place.

Adult bullying and harassment is a growing occurrence. Personal insults, aggressive behaviour, threats, public shaming, and unwanted personal contact can be evidence of this. There are similar mental and physical outcomes for victims as are experienced by bullied youth.

We have identified several LGBTQ individuals advocating against bullying toward the community. To read more and see the complete list, click HERE

Directory of past 'Did You Know?' Articles See Here


The goal of QueerBio.com is to be the definitive online biographical reference source for the international LGBTQ community. Its database lists over 20,000 contemporary and historical figures who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, two-spirit, or gender fluid (LGBTQ) and includes artists, sports figures, politicians, entertainers, business leaders, academics, activists, and more. The database is widely international in scope and is an ideal source for research and analysis with full search and sort functionality.

The mission is to inspire, educate, and motivate all generations of LGBTQ individuals and others through a collective knowledge of this international community.

Managing Editor: Mark S. Bonham

Search for a Biography

To search for an individual from the database of over 20,000 biographies, simply type the name in the Search Box located in the top right hand corner of this Home Page and click on GO. Similarly, you can search for a common characteristic such as Country, City, Nobel Prize winners, writers, and so on.

Alternatively, you can view and scroll through the entire list of biographies by viewing the All Biographies section.

Library of Congress Historic Collection - LGBTQ+ Studies Web Archive

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QueerBio.com has been chosen for the Library of Congress Web Archiving Program - Preserving important cultural artifacts by acquiring, cataloging, preserving and serving collections material of historical importance to foster education and scholarship.

Announcing Our New Documentary Project - Being Different: 101 Global LGBTQ Individuals Who Changed the World

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Despite adversity and discrimination, LGBTQ individuals have excelled throughout history. Yet historians and academics have conveniently participated in the heterosexist erasure of these LGBTQ contributions by omitting the LGBTQ status of prominent historical figures from academic and historical documents. Accordingly, there are relatively few comprehensive projects which document and showcase the influence of these LGBTQ efforts.

Being Different: 101 Global LGBTQ Individuals Who Changed The World will be an original documentary outlining the contributions that members of the LGBTQ community have made, individually and collectively, to changing the world.

We are now Crowdfunding to get this project off the ground. We would love to have you as part of our team. You can help us and SUPPORT THIS PROJECT!

SEE THE TRAILER, READ MORE AND CROWDFUND HERE

Our goal is to make QueerBio.com the go-to website for global biographical information on LGBTQ identified individuals. To do this requires a serious commitment of people and resources, so we need your help to fund and help this project grow.


Click here for more information.

Sign Up for our Bi-Weekly Newsletter

Sign up to receive our informative bi-weekly newsletter. Included in the newsletter is the updated 'DID YOU KNOW?' column, a sample of new biographies added since the previous newsletter, and relevant news features pertaining to QueerBio.com.

SIGN UP HERE

Bonham Centre Awards Gala

Annual Awards established in 2007 to recognize individuals or groups that have made a significant contribution to the advancement and education of human rights issues surrounding sexual education. Click here to find out more about the Bonham Centre Awards, past recipients, and present nominees.

Books Available From QueerBio.Com

NEW RELEASE

It's A Fabulous Morning! My Interviews With Fascinating People in the LGBTQ World (Pearse Murray and Mark S. Bonham, 2019) presents fascinating interviews with individuals from the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Intersex, Two Spirit and Ally (LGBTQ) community. Icons such as Lily Tomlin, Chaz Bono, Melissa Etheridge, Mark Tewksbury, John Cameron Mitchell, Kathleen Wynne, Wanda Sykes, Tony Kushner, David Hockney, Edmund White and more provide their personal stories of the community and their lives within it. Compelling insight into events of the community, such as Toronto’s Bath House Raids, is also provided. 262 pages.

New books available

A Path to Diversity: LGBTQ Participation in the Working World (Mark S. Bonham, 2017) investigates the current state of employment markets around the world for the LGBTQ community. Included is a discussion of equality in the workplace and why it is important to both the employer and employee, the wage gap, which professions are attractive to LGBTQ individuals and why, and the role of unions and government legislation. A survey of seventy five professions provides a status report for each, and seventy two biographies of influential LGBTQ professionals from around the world is included. 242 pages

Notables: 101 Global LBGTQ People Who Changed the World (Mark S. Bonham, 2015) reveals a group of select global Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) individuals whose accomplishments in their profession changed the world in some relevant way. Included are founders of various social movements, innovators in sports, leaders in business and politics, explorers and discoverers, instigators in religious movements, thinkers in philosophy, infamous villains, creators of new academic fields of study, and risk takers in the arts, culture, and entertainment worlds. 212 pages.

Champions: Biographies of Global LGBTQ Pioneers (Mark S. Bonham, 2014) reveals a group of select artists, writers, politicians, lawyers, sports figures, activists, and religious figures from around the world who have helped shape the history of the LGBTQ community. Presented in a convenient notebook format. 114 pages.

READ MORE AND PURCHASE PRINT or EBOOK COPIES HERE

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ALL BOOKS NOW AVAILABLE ON FLAMINGO MARKET

Order for yourself, and the books also make an ideal gift for friends and family while supporting the development of QueerBio.Com