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Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

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Title: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity


1
Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
  • Ruth E. Fassinger
  • University of Maryland

2
Why Are We Here?
  • The APA Council of Representatives approved the
    following motion at its August 2007 meeting
  • Council requests that diversity training on
    sexual orientation and gender identity be
    provided to Council at its February 2008 meeting
    and to boards and committees at the March 2008
    Consolidated Meetings. The training shall be
    developed by the Governance Affairs Office with
    assistance from the Office on Lesbian, Gay,
    Bisexual and Transgender Concerns.

3
Learning Objectives
  • ?Increase knowledge of scientific research
    relevant to sexual orientation and gender
    identity stigma, prejudice, and discrimination
  • ?Increase awareness of impact of heterosexism
    experienced by sexual and gender minorities
    across the lifespan
  • ?Increase skill in considering sexual orientation
    and gender identity in professional situations
  • ?Increase self-efficacy for reducing stereotyping
    of LGBT people

4
Overview
  • ?Nature of sexual stigma
  • -Manifested both societally and individually
  • -Affects sexual minority AND majority people
  • ?Manifestations of sexual stigma across the
    lifespan and life domains
  • -Identity development and coming out
  • -Health (mental and physical)
  • -Relationships and families
  • -Education and Work
  • ?Where do we go next?

5
Prejudice
Hate Crime
Discrimination
Heterosexism
Stigma
Homophobia
6
Brief History of Sexual Stigma
  • ?Late 1800s Homosexuality as status variable is
    articulated stigmatization inherent in early
    conceptualizations, remains largely unquestioned
    until mid-twentieth century
  • ?1950s,1960s Kinsey and Hooker offer pioneering
    research
  • ? 1950s-1970s Rights movements raise
    consciousness, tolerance
  • ?1972 Weinberg introduces term homophobia and
    idea that hostility to homosexuality, not
    homosexuality itself, posed threat to mental
    health
  • ?1973, 1975 Both APAs vote to remove
    homosexuality from DSM our APA enjoins
    psychologists to take the lead in removing the
    stigma of mental illness that has long been
    associated with homosexual orientations
  • ?1980s, 1990s Data accumulating on bias in
    therapy, research, and
  • education/training regarding sexual
    orientation personal phobia model losing
    explanatory power
  • ?2000s Herek offers new conceptual model of
    sexual stigma

7
SEXUAL STIGMA
Societal Manifestations
Individual Manifestations
  • Enacted
  • Felt
  • Internalized
  • ?Self-stigma
  • ?Sexual Prejudice
  • Heterosexism
  • E.g.
  • ?Law/Civil Rights
  • ?Religion
  • ?Health/Health Care

8
Structural/Institutional Sexual Stigma
  • Heterosexism
  • ?Promotes heterosexual assumption, renders
    sexual minorities invisible
  • ?Perpetuates view of heterosexual behavior and
    relationships as normal, natural, and superior
  • ?By embedding in societal institutions, ensure
    sexual minorities have less power and status
  • -Law/Civil Rights (e.g., couples/families,
    work)
  • -Religion
  • -Health/Health Care (mental, physical)

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11
Psychological
  • Enacted
  • Defn
  • Courtesy stigma
  • Hate crimes
  • Felt
  • Defn
  • Stereotype threat
  • Concealment
  • Minority stress models
  • Internalized
  • Defn
  • Attitudes
  • Self-stigma
  • Sexual prejudice

12
Psychological/Personal Sexual Stigma
  • Enacted Stigma
  • Individual behaviors that enact stigma
  • ?1/5 LGB adults experienced violence or property
    crime based on s.o. at least once in
    lifetime
  • ?1/2 LGB adults experienced verbal harassment
  • ?1/10 experienced employment or housing
    discrimination
  • ?Est. 37,800 hate crimes motivated by s.o.
    2000-2003
  • ?Men more likely than women to be victims of
    hate crimes
  • ?Hate crimes based on s.o. inflict greater
    psychological trauma than other violent
    crimes

13
Psychological/Personal Sexual Stigma
  • Felt Stigma
  • Individual awareness of stigma and its
    consequences
  • ?Stigma consciousness
  • ?Minority stress and anticipatory coping
  • -identity concealment linked to
    psychological distress and health problems
  • -being out correlates with positive
    psychological and physical states
  • ?Stereotype threat

14
Psychological/Personal Sexual Stigma
  • Internalized Stigma
  • acceptance of legitimacy of stigma and
  • incorporation into self-concept
  • ?Self-Stigma
  • -characterizes stigmatized, minority group
  • ?Sexual Prejudice
  • -characterizes non-stigmatized, majority
    group
  • -distinct from attitudes toward heterosexist
    policies
  • -concealable nature of s.o. creates threat,
    opportunity
  • -correlates gender, conservative political
    religious beliefs, dogmatism, choice beliefs,
    little or no contact
  • -acceptable in contemporary society

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18
Sexual Stigma Across the Lifespan and Life
Domains
  • ?Identity development and coming out
  • ?Health and health care (mental, physical)
  • ?Relationships and families
  • ?Education and Work

19
Identity Development
  • ?Where heterosexuality is normal, deviant
    status demands declaration, explanation
  • ?In context of sexual stigmatization,
    recognizing, accepting, affirming, and disclosing
    ones identity as sexual minority becomes
    important developmental task
  • ?Disclosure of identity (coming out) represents
    strategy for managing stigma with both negative
    and positive consequences
  • ?Enacted, Felt, and Internalized Stigma play
    central roles in identity development and
    disclosure

20
Challenges to Sexual Minority
Identity Development
  • Negative peer and societal messages, behaviors
  • Internalized sexual stigma or self-stigmatization
  • Uninformed or biased helping professionals
  • Childhood events and background
  • Repetition and continuity of coming out process
  • Invisibility, lack of role models, lack of
    reference group
  • Lack of family modeling or support
  • Religious prohibitions
  • Isolation, lack of accurate information
  • Confusion about sexuality in general

21
Health
  • Mental and Physical Health
  • ?Although most sexual minorities function well,
    this population may be at heightened risk for
    psychological distress (including suicide) and
    substance use
  • ?Correlations between s.o. and mental health
    largely explained by experiences with
    discrimination
  • ?Self-stigmatization has important consequences
    for physical and psychological health and
    well-being
  • ?Collective identity appears to moderate minority
    stress, reduce psychological distress
  • ?Multiple identities suggest both costs and
    benefits
  • ?Health care difficulties well-documented,
  • particularly for transgender people

22
Relationships and Families
  • Same-sex couples/families must negotiate the same
    issues as heterosexual couples/families
  • ?Adjusting to one anothers habits, tastes,
    styles
  • ?Maintaining a household
  • ?Managing finances
  • ?Dealing with extended family
  • ?Making decisions about children
  • ?Negotiating the home-work interface
  • ?Coping with life crises
  • ?Maintaining emotional and
  • physical intimacy

23
Relationships and Families
  • BUT same-sex couples must negotiate these tasks
    within societal context of
  • ?STIGMA
  • ?ISOLATION
  • ?INVISIBILITY

AND face additional complexities and barriers if
they possess another stigmatized status
24
Structural/Institutional Impact
  • ?Lack of legal and fiscal supports for the
    relationship
  • Marriage rights
  • Adoption, child custody rights
  • Immigration rights
  • Health and tax benefits
  • ?Lack of support, denial, censure from families
    and communities
  • ?Social denial of the relationship, regardless of
    commitment or longevity
  • ?Men Threat of HIV/AIDS
  • ?Women Invisibility of sexuality

25
Individual/Relational Impact
  • ? Lack of experience or role-modeling
  • of same-sex relationships
  • ? Sexual definitions of relationships
  • Daily stresses and conflicts of identity
    development, management
  • Close same-sex friendships
  • Background events (e.g., sexual violence) that
    complicate intimacy

26
Education and Work
  • Education
  • ?In 37 states, LGB students can be legally
    harassed
  • ?In 47 states, transgender students can be
    legally harassed
  • ? 5 states prohibit discussion of homosexuality
    in schools or mandate negative references only
  • ? Almost half of sexual minority youth report
    experiencing harassment or violence in school
    1/3 report missing school out of fear for
    personal safety
  • ?Drop-out rates for sexual minority youth as high
    as 28

27
Education and Work
  • Workplace
  • ?In 31 states, is legal to fire someone based on
    sexual orientation
  • ?In 39 states, is legal to fire someone based on
    gender identity
  • ?Gay men earn 10-32 less than similarly
    qualified heterosexual men
  • ?22-64 transgender people report incomes below
    25,000
  • ?16-68 sexual minorities report experiencing
    employment discrimination
  • ? Controlled experiments find discrimination
    effects in 7/8 studies

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31
Workplace Discrimination
?Formal and Informal ?Potential and
Encountered ?Perceived and Real
Informal
Formal
Perceived
Real
Potential
Encountered
32
Stigma and Vocational Development
  • ?Delays due to coming out
  • ?Chilly educational and workplace climates
  • ?Bias in vocational counseling/testing
  • ?Occupational stereotyping
  • ?Occupational restrictions (e.g. military,
    sports, religion)
  • ?Vocational displacement
  • ?Lack of mentors/role models
  • ?Identity management/disclosure
  • ?Invisibility of dual career issues

33
Where Do We Go Next?
  • ?Individual commitment
  • Personal
  • Professional
  • ?APA
  • Governance
  • Inclusion
  • ?Local and national advocacy/policy

34
INSTRUCTIONS
?In groups of six, discuss this question for 30
minutes
Given what you have just heard, what you already
know, and what you feel and have experienced,
what will you do in your sphere of influence to
help address issues of diversity and
inclusiveness relative to sexual orientation and
gender identity within APA and in your
professional life?
?Write a response to the question on an index
card, which will be collected ?Complete Learning
Assessment and Evaluation forms
Responses from index cards and didactic
presentation will be posted on Council website.
Follow-up of personal goals will be conducted at
August Council meeting.
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