OII-USA
Abbreviation | OII-USA |
---|---|
Formation | February 2011 |
Type | NGO |
Purpose | Intersex human rights |
Region served | United States |
Executive Director | Hida Viloria |
Website | oii-usa.org |
OII-USA was founded in February 2011[1] The director of OII-USA is author and activist Hida Viloria.[1][2] Dana Zzyym has been the associate director since February 19, 2015, when intersex activists Dr. Dani Lee Harris, Hida Viloria, and Zzyym re-branded OII-USA by co-founding the Intersex Campaign for Equality (ICE).[3]
Mission
OII-USA aims to campaign for the human rights of intersex people, particularly rights to self-determination and bodily integrity. It also aims to support intersex individuals, and provide information on the actual life experiences of people with intersex variations to professionals working providing services to them, including medical personnel, psychological experts, sexologists, sociologists and academics.
The Intersex Campaign for Equality (a.k.a OII-USA), is a multi-gendered, multi-orientation, multi-racial NGO founded by and for intersex people. The Intersex Campaign for Equality's mission is to attain human rights—particularly the rights to bodily integrity, self-determination, legal recognition, and de-pathologization—for all intersex people regardless of sexual orientation, gender identity, race, ability or class, recognizing that some intersex individuals, particularly those with nonbinary gender identities, remain marginalized even within the intersex community. [4]
Activities
OII-USA advocates for human rights for intersex people in the United States via personal communication, consulting, public speaking, publishing, and lobbying. The organization also provides peer support, news updates, information, and educational events and lectures. They have lobbied extensively in the press and in print against Intersex Genital Mutilation, aka medically unnecessary "normalizing" genital surgeries and hormone treatments of intersex infants and minors, and against discriminatory regulations for intersex female athletes.
In 2011, founder and director Hida Viloria lobbied the U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for inclusion of intersex people, as the "I" in "LGBTI", in LGBT anti-discrimination policies. On Intersex Awareness Day, October 26, 2012, OII-USA published the free educational resource Brief Guidelines for Intersex Allies, and in May, 2013, Your Beautiful Child: Information for Parents, a groundbreaking resource of non-stigmatizing information for parents, authored by Viloria, which includes links to unbiased medical studies regarding medically unnecessary surgeries for intersex people, and is being utilized by health care providers around the world.[5][6]
On Intersex Awareness Day, October 26, 2015, OII-USA Associate Director Dana Zzyym made history by announcing that they, along with their legal representatives from Lambda Legal, the U.S.'s oldest LGBT legal rights organization, are suing the United States Department of State for legal gender recognition on their passport as someone who is neither male nor female. Zzyym was born intersex and identifies as non-binary and is seeking accurate federal gender recognition. In 2015, OII-USA assisted the United Nations Free & Equal Campaign in drafting their groundbreaking resource, the Intersex Fact Sheet,[7] and in 2016, Viloria's essay, "What's in A Name: Intersex and identity", which calls for a non-stigmatizing, equality based linguistic approach to discussing intersex people, was published in the college curriculum textbook, Queer: A Reader for Writers, by Oxford University Press.[8]
OII-USA has also been heavily involved in the international intersex human rights movement. On Human Rights Day, December 10, 2012, founder and director Hida Viloria spearheaded the first global call for human rights by and for intersex people, via the "Open Letter: A Call for the Inclusion of Human Rights for Intersex People",[9] which s/he authored and delivered to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights with participants of the 2nd International Intersex Forum in Stockholm signing on in support. The following year, Viloria served as one of three intersex participants chosen by ILGA-Europe to co-organize the 3rd International Intersex Forum, in Malta, which led to the creation of the Malta Declaration, the most highly utilized and agreed upon declaration of demands and human rights goals of the international intersex community. The following month, on Human Rights Day 2013, Viloria's long term activism was acknowledged when s/he became the first openly intersex person invited to speak at the United Nations, educating about the human rights violations intersex people face and the need for legal protection from discrimination at the event, "Sport Comes Out Against Homophobia".[10][11]
In addition, in early 2010, before founding OII-USA, Viloria, as Human Rights Spokesperson for the Organisation Intersex International (OII), lobbied the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for equal treatment of intersex female athletes after the gender verification testing of South African track star Caster Semenya. This resulted in h/er participating, by invitation, at the IOC 's 2010 meeting of experts in Lausanne, Switzerland, where s/he lobbied that intersex female athletes be allowed to compete as is, without having to undergo unnecessary medical treatments, and that the use of the pathologizing term "disorders of sex development"/DSD to describe these athletes be discontinued.
Media Activism & Visibility
Founder and Director Hida Viloria has been published extensively on intersex issues in CNN.com, The American Journal of Bioethics, The New York Times, The Global Herald, Ms., The Advocate, and others, and in Amrch, 2017, s/he will become the first openly intersex person to have a book published by one of the Big Four (book publishing) companies, when he/r memoir, Born Both: An Intersex Life, is released by Hatchette Book Group.[12]
In 2015 and 2016, Associate Director Dana Zzyym's groundbreaking U.S. lawsuit for accurate gender recognition received extensive coverage in national venues such as The Washington Post,[13] The Huffington Post,[14] CNN.com,[15] The New York Times,[16] The Los Angeles Times,[17] The Advocate,[18] and many more, bringing widespread mainstream attention to the existence of, and the need for equal rights for, intersex people.
In addition, founder and director Hida Viloria has been a pioneer in intersex visibility as one of the first people to come out as intersex on television, radio and film, with interviews spanning the last two decades. In 2014, Viloria spoke about discrimination against intersex female athletes on Aljazeera's The Stream,[19] and provided an introduction to intersex on Huffington Post Live, in November 2013.[20] In 2013 Viloria also provided expert testimony, in Spanish, for the Spanish language television court show Caso Cerrado,[21] and was interviewed on BBC World Service radio twice: in May, regarding the ground-breaking U.S. lawsuit by the parents of an intersex child against the doctors that operated on him as an infant.,[22] and in November, regarding Germany's third gender law for intersex infants.[23]
Earlier television interviews by Viloria include appearances on Inside Edition (1997, 2009), The Montel Williams Show (1998), ABC's 20/20 (2002), The Tyra Banks Show (2010), and a 2007 appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show which was viewed by an estimated 40 million people across the world.[24] Viloria has also appeared in several of the films about intersex, including Intersexion (2012), One in 2000 (2007),[25] and Hermaphrodites Speak (1997).[26] In addition, in the groundbreaking 1999 documentary Gendernauts, about gender non-conforming people, Viloria became one of the first people to speak publicly on film about having a gender identity that is neither male nor female—what is today known as genderqueer or non-binary—as well as about being intersex.
Birth assignments and surgical treatment
Articles specifically focusing on intersex birth registrations by Hida Viloria can be found at The Advocate,[27] and The Global Herald.[28] Her work focusing on "normalising" surgeries has been published at The Advocate.[29]
Access to sport
Hida Viloria has prior experience in advising the International Olympic Committee on intersex perspectives in access to sport, and she has continued this work as part of OII-USA.[30][31][32] With Spanish hurdler Maria José Martínez-Patiño,[33] Viloria has argued that Olympic sex testing is applied in a way that targets only 'butch' women, those who are "masculine looking".[31] On International Human Rights Day 2013, Hida Vilora spoke as director of OII-USA at the United Nations event, "Sport Comes Out Against Homophobia".[34][35]
Affiliations
OII-USA is a national affiliate of Organisation Intersex International, and a member of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association.
References
- 1 2 Welcome to OII-USA, promoting human rights and bodily integrity for intersex people!, OII-USA, January 15, 2012
- ↑ Op-ed: Intersex, the Final Coming-Out Frontier, Hida Viloria at The Advocate, 12 June 2013.
- ↑ http://oii-usa.org/about/directors/
- ↑ Our mission, OII-USA
- ↑ Brief Guildelines for Intersex Allies, OII-USA, October 26, 2012.
- ↑ Your Beautiful Child: Information for Parents, OII-USA, May 16, 2013.
- ↑
- ↑ http://www.oxfordpresents.com/readers/book_detail.php?isbn13=9780190277109
- ↑ [http://www.ilga-europe.org/sites/default/files/hrd_2012_-_intersex_forum_-_un_navil_pillay_letter_2012.pdf, ILGA-Europe, December 10, 2012
- ↑ International Human Rights Day 2013: Sport Comes Out Against Homophobia, International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, December 2, 2013.
- ↑
- ↑ https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/hida-viloria/born-both/9780316347846/
- ↑ https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/federal-eye/wp/2015/10/27/intersex-applicants-face-passport-discrimination-says-lawsuit-seeking-option-other-than-m-or-f
- ↑ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/intersex-veteran-passport_us_562f8076e4b0c66bae5962e1
- ↑ http://www.cnn.com/2016/07/23/us/veteran-intersex-passport-lawsuit/
- ↑ http://nytlive.nytimes.com/womenintheworld/2016/07/22/intersex-person-dana-zzyym-denied-passport-sues-u-s-government/
- ↑ http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-intersex-lawsuit-20160720-snap-story.html
- ↑ http://www.advocate.com/travel/2015/10/27/intersex-veteran-denied-passport-refusing-choose-gender-files-lawsuit
- ↑ http://stream.aljazeera.com/story/201409031709-0024124
- ↑ Is being intersex a third gender?, Huffington Post Live, in 2013
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ http://hidaviloria.com/video/
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1139122/
- ↑ http://oii-usa.org/3288/watch-hermaphrodites-speak-the-first-intersex-documentary/
- ↑ Germany’s Third Gender Law Fails on Equality, The Advocate, November 2013
- ↑ Germany’s Third Gender Law: Not What Intersex People Most Need, The Global Herald, November 2013
- ↑ Why We Must Protect Intersex Babies, The Advocate, September 27, 2013
- ↑ The IOC's unkind cuts, Roger Brigham, Bay Area Reporter, March 11, 2010.
- 1 2 Reexamining Rationales of “Fairness”: An Athlete and Insider's Perspective on the New Policies on Hyperandrogenism in Elite Female Athletes, The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 12, Issue 7, 2012.
- ↑ Gender Rules in Sport – Leveling The Playing Field, Or Reversed Doping?, Hida Viloria, The Global Herald, April 11, 2010.
- ↑ Well, Is She Or Isn't She?, SI, September 7, 2009
- ↑ Sport Comes Out Against Homophobia, UN Live United Nations TV, December 10, 2013
- ↑ At UN human rights event, Navratilova and Collins decry homophobic violence, United Nations UN News Centre, December 10, 2013