Word: gendered
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...council also approved the 2006-2007 Handbook for Students, amending the current statement about harassment to include those targeted “on the basis of...sexual identity.” The addition reflects a decision reached by the Harvard Corporation on April 3 to include gender identity in the College’s non-discrimination policy...
...Supporters Alliance (BGLTSA) in a lecture last night at Harvard Hall. “I was working on the Princeton policy, and the H-word was bandied about quite a bit,” she said. Last week, Princeton’s administration added provisions for “gender identity and expression” into its nondiscrimination policy. Harvard announced a similar decision on April 11. The speech was this year’s Papadopoulos Lecture, coordinated by BGLTSA in memory of Nicholas Papadopoulos, a graduate of Harvard’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS...
...think the UC’s restructuring decision is not what the student body wants.” THE UC GETS RELIGION At Monday’s meeting, the UC also voted to fund events sponsored by student groups that limit membership or officership on the basis of gender or religion. Haddock had ruled the previous week that the bill to amend the council’s nondiscrimination policy had not garnered the requisite two-thirds majority. But in what Haddock described as a “parliamentary twist,” a further review of last week?...
...Catholic organization Opus Dei [April 24]. Any group that is exclusive, isolated and secretive cannot be truly Christian. Just like the press investigations into the protection given to pedophile priests, your article will help the Roman Catholic Church cleanse itself of its secrecy as well as the flaw of gender-determined and gender-dominated leadership. So absorbed are the church leaders in promoting and protecting their agenda that they fail to fulfill their role in the truthful representation of Christ. Etta Albright Cresson, Pennsylvania, U.S. Your article on Opus Dei made plain the dangers of fanaticism and extremism within religious...
Iranian human-rights activist Shirin Ebadi won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003. A judge who was dismissed from the bench after the 1979 Islamic revolution, she is now a lawyer who works to promote press freedom, spotlight gender inequity and child abuse, and defend dissidents against Iran's theocratic regime. Ebadi, 58, whose memoir Iran Awakening is out this week, spoke with TIME's Jeff Chu about the Nobel's impact, Iran's nuclear ambitions and her daily relaxation ritual...