User:Sophieburke99/sandbox

genderqueer article game plan: less complex definition/fix main paragraph, add more to history from the 1990s/give credit to who coined the term, add to discrimination page - recent trump stuff, distinction between it being an umbrella term and add dictionary definition Article evaluation of Abortion in New Zealand: [note my first evaluation was deleted for an unknown reason] need links in text for relevant court cases, text is written in complex terms, many citations needed tags, more information needed on current public opinion, has not been updated since 2011, go more in depth about the effect of legalization in other countries had on New Zealand, how has the pro-life and pro-choice community in New Zealand effected the laws.

After reading talk page: some discrepancies noted, links have been modified and users are aware of recent editing not being useful for making this article better.

research: seen as more of an umbrella term for nonconforming people became more populated in the mid-1990s - writers like sandy stone and judith butler, writing commentary on transgender/ genders also conceptualized gender queer without using the word exactly in the mid 90s -Riki Anne Wilchins associated with the word Add recent trump bullshit about transgender people to discrimination section

Draft additions: Debates/conflicts: The term non-binary being another term for genderqueer is under debate in some circles. Like many gender identities a lot of definitions come from individual experiences and opinions, meaning the definitions shift a lot. While some genderqueer people feel that non-binary is another name for their identity, many do not like the terms being used interchangeably.

History: The term genderqueer came more into use during the mid 1990s. Riki Anne Wilchins is often associated with the word genderqueer, especially because of her contributions to GenderQueer: Voiced Beyond the Sexual Binary which was published in 2002. Wilchins stated she identifies as genderqueer in her 1997 autobiography. In 1995 she was also published in the newsletter In Your Face, where she used the term genderqueer. In the newsletter the term seemingly refers to people with complex and unnamed gender expressions.