When Hannah Latham was pregnant, she felt as if she and her partner Rowena were the only people in the world in their situation. So she started up a magazine to help other LGBT families feel less isolated – The Guardian 14.09.13
Now the Prime Minister’s on board, let’s make better sex education a reality
Following David Cameron’s admission that sex education should be modernised to reflect the ‘dangers’ of the internet, Louisa Peacock and Emma Barnett outline the next stages for the Telegraph Wonder Women campaign that got the PM talking about this controversial topic in the first place.
Schools OUT UK is on Facebook!
As of last Saturday (24th August) there is a new page dedicated to Schools OUT UK on Facebook.
Why the term ‘gay lifestyle’ offends and is hurtful
Shah Salimat is the editor-in-chief of Popspoken, an entertainment and lifestyle newsblog with a tinge of spice, covering everything Singaporean and international, from India’s gang-rape problem to Baey Yam Keng’s selfies.
Israel to build its first monument to gay victims of the Nazis
Tel Aviv’s Meir Park is to be the site of Israel’s first monument recognizing the gay victims of Nazi Germany
Welby says CofE schools to fight homophobic bullying
A campaign to stop homophobic bullying will be introduced in Church of England schools, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has announced.
Sue Sanders Appears in Guardian 100 most influential LGBT people of 2013
Sue Sanders, co-chair and founder of Schools Out has appeared in The Guardian’s list of the 100 most influential LGBT people, at a ceremony in London on June 28th
An Audience With Martina Navratilova – June 23rd 2013
Sue Sanders, Clare Balding and Martina Navratilova discussed the Schools Out mantra of usualising and actualising LGBT lives in the classroom and on the curriculum at St James Theatre on June 23rd
Does coming out as gay or lesbian at the BBC harm your career?
Chantal Badjie, BBC Diversity Centre Last year the BBC’s cult business editor Robert Peston posted a blog in which Colin (Lord) Browne, former CEO of BP, speaking at Arup’s staff LGBT network , claimed that the arts and media were much more tolerant of gay and lesbian workers than other working environments such as business and finance. Being openly gay was something Lord Browne never felt he could embrace, until he resigned from BP in 2007. But are the arts …
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