保護性小眾,美國私立大學廁所不分男女
[端傳媒/端傳媒/105.03.31]
為避免跨性別(Transgender)等人士上廁所時遇到尷尬,美國曼哈頓私立大學柯柏聯盟學院(Cooper Union)近日開創先河,將校園內所有廁所的男女標誌移除,以「有小便池和廁位的廁所」和「只有廁位的廁所」的標誌取代。
「公共廁所並不需要問你是男的還是女的,只需要問你想小便還是大便。」柯柏聯盟學院學生Rio Sofia表示。
這項活動由該校學生去年秋天首先發起,他們為爭取跨性別人士的權益,摘除了學校最古老建築樓內廁所的男女標誌。而校方不僅未將那些標誌復原,如今更在廁所「去性別化」方面又前進了一步。
校長米亞(Bill Mea)表示,一個空間被「性別化」後,某個性別的人就會自認為擁有該空間,當他們發現有不屬於該空間的人進入時,彼此都會感到壓力。
他還表示,自己雖然無法改變外界對待跨性別和性別不確定人士的方式,但可以改變學校的環境,讓校園內每個人都覺得安心。他又指新政策實際造成的變化很小,大部分學生和教職員仍在用他們之前用的廁所,但認為學校需在相關議題上表明立場。
有關跨性別人士能否自由選擇廁所的議題,近日在美國引發爭議。美國北卡羅來納州第一大城夏洛特市(Charlotte)今年2月通過一項條例,允許跨性別者從今年4月起可按照自己的性別認同(gender identity)選擇廁所,而不受出生證明文件上的性別限制。
但這項地方條例在州政府遇到阻力。北卡羅來納州州長麥克克羅里(Pat McCrory)於3月23日簽署了一項法案,要求跨性別人士使用和他們出生證明文件上性別一致的廁所,並禁止州內地方政府自行頒布保護LGBT人士的反歧視法例。該州立法會隨後在不到24小時內通過了這項法案。
這項法案令北卡羅來納州飽受批評。美國西雅圖、舊金山、紐約市均要求市政府僱員避免前往該州,美國航空公司、富國銀行(Wells Fargo)等也對相關法案表示擔憂。NBA 甚至表示可能會把2017年全明星賽改到夏洛特市進行。
一些支持該法案的人認為,讓公共設施變得「性別中立」,可能會增加性犯罪,威脅個人安全和隱私。此前夏洛特市在允許跨性別人士根據性別認同選擇廁所的條例表決時,就有1萬2000多人在網上請願反對,認為該條例會令夏洛特市的婦女和兒童陷入危險。
但北卡羅來納州首府羅利市(Raleigh)市民 Devin Lentz認為,相關論調只是一種「迷思」,若按照州法案,讓出生性別為男、性別認同為女的跨性別者進入男廁所,他們反而更容易受到性騷擾。Vox報導也認為,即便夏洛特市實行相關條例,性侵犯在當地仍是違法的,沒有明確證據表明實施條例後犯罪率會上升,報導批評推行州法案的人士利用這一「迷思」歧視性小眾。
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No More Men's or Women's Rooms
[INSIDER HOGHTER ED/Josh Logue/2016.03.31]
Just one week before North Carolina passed a bill restricting transgender access to bathrooms at public colleges in the state, a college president in New York City announced his institution would be moving in exactly the opposite direction.
Bill Mea, acting president of the Cooper Union, informed his campus via email that soon all the college's bathrooms will be gender neutral. Anyone will be allowed to use any bathroom, and the signs designating bathrooms for either men or women will be replaced with signs that say either “Restroom With Urinals and Stalls,” “Restroom With Only Stalls” or “Restroom Single Occupancy.”
As some states have considered legislation similar to North Carolina’s, many colleges and universities around the country have been slowly expanding support for transgender students by adding gender-neutral, single-stall bathrooms around campus or simply allowing people to use the bathroom that aligns with the gender identity. But Cooper Union appears to be the first college to completely eliminate gender distinctions in bathrooms.
“We, who are in positions of power, have the obligation to not only stand with those without power, but to stand in front of them, clearing a path for them to walk,” Mea wrote in his campus email. “I cannot change the outside world and how it treats transgender and gender-nonconforming people, but I can change the Cooper Union environment to help everyone feel safe when they are inside our buildings.”
The policy change arose out of a yearslong push by student activists for reform and an impromptu on-campus test of the policy. Several transgender students at Cooper Union began fighting for “degendered” campus bathrooms about two years ago and were joined along the way by up to 50 more students and others who helped in various ways. Last fall, some of them removed the signs from bathrooms in a building on campus and left in their place banners reading just “Bathroom :)” or “Degendered.”
Mea wrote that he decided to leave the signs off “in order to see how we all reacted.” And, “from what I have observed, most of us just continued using the facilities most familiar to us and visitors figured things fairly quickly.”
Cooper Union is a small college of fewer than 1,000 students and has no gym locker rooms. So when the signs are printed and installed, as Mea noted in his email, the college will have removed all "gender identifications from any spaces on campus."
Mea said, in an interview with Inside Higher Ed, the reaction on campus and among alumni has been mostly positive.
“There are certainly some people who would prefer to keep it the way it is and weren’t sure why we had to make a change, but I have not had any particular negative reaction out there,” he said. A handful of alumni can be seen objecting on social media, but those posts are scarce and meet resistance from other alumni.
“I think you’ll begin seeing this more and more,” Mea said about the college’s new policy, though it will depend on how amenable local lawmakers are. “We here in New York City, we have the support of our mayor and the support of our city,” he said. “That allows us that opportunity to be more expansive, but obviously there may be less of an opportunity where other colleges are located.”
Shane Windmeyer, director of Campus Pride, one of the many organizations that jumped to condemn the law in North Carolina, said Cooper Union’s was “a positive move,” but noted that it is only part of a bigger movement.
“Colleges of all sizes have been designating gender-inclusive restrooms for over a decade now. I do believe this is part of a larger movement of safety and there will be more colleges including more options for gender-inclusive restroom as well as locker room spaces. … No college that we are aware of has made every campus restroom in academic buildings gender inclusive; however, many much larger campuses have been adding gender-inclusive options in academic buildings for well over a decade now.” Still, he said, “it is a significant move and one that sends a timely message within higher education. It doesn't just get better. We have to do better and Cooper Union just did that.”
L, one of the students who pushed for the change (and asked to be referred to only as L), said removing gender distinctions entirely helps transgender students in a way simply allowing them to use men’s or women’s bathrooms does not.
“Even if it is legal, I have been followed and harassed going into either bathroom because I don’t present as gender conforming. I’ll get assaulted whether it’s illegal or not,” L said. “There’s a lot more than can be done, and I don’t want it to feel like the end-all, be-all is making bathrooms degendered. But it is one step, and it’s pretty easy. It’s literally just taking signs down.”
轉自:https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2016/03/31/cooper-union-makes-all-bathrooms-gender-neutral