The Impact of 2024 Anti-Transgender Legislation on Youth (original) (raw)

Executive Summary

Many states have enacted laws or have legislation pending that would restrict the rights of transgender youth. In 2023, over 500 pieces of legislation restricting the rights of LGBTQ people were introduced in state legislatures.1 Nearly as many bills have been introduced or remain under consideration thus far in 2024.2 A substantial percentage of these bills specifically target transgender youth, such as by limiting access to gender-affirming care, participation in sports and school programs, access to bathrooms and other facilities, or by discouraging the use of gender-affirming pronouns for transgender youth.3

At the same time, many states have banned practices intended to change a young person’s sexual orientation or gender identity, known as conversion therapy, or have laws pending to do so. Several states have also enacted or introduced “shield’ laws to protect families and health practitioners who facilitate access to gender-affirming care from prosecution beyond state borders where such care has been restricted.4

This report estimates the number of transgender youth ages 13-175 who are impacted by six types of laws and policies that have gained traction in the 2023-2024 legislative sessions. For this report, we focus on laws that have been enacted or new legislation that was either introduced in 2024 or “carried over” from 2023.6 These laws and policies include four common types of legislation that restrict the rights of transgender youth—gender-affirming care bans, bans on sports participation, bathroom and other facilities bans, and restrictions on the use of gender-affirming pronouns—and two that confer protections via gender-affirming care “shield” laws and conversion therapy bans.7

Key Findings

Ninety-three percent of transgender youth ages 13-17 in the U.S., an estimated 280,300 transgender youth, live in states that have passed or proposed one or more laws banning access to gender-affirming care, participation in sports, use of bathrooms and other sex-separated facilities, or affirmation of gender through pronoun use.

Bans on Gender-Affirming Care

Bans on Transgender Participation in Sports

Bans on Access to Bathrooms and Other Facilities

Bans on Gender-Affirming Pronouns

At the same time, many transgender youth live in states that offer one of two kinds of laws that aim to protect transgender youth. Nearly half of transgender youth live in states that protect their access to gender-affirming care (“shield” laws), and two-thirds of states have enacted laws or policies prohibiting conversion therapy intended to change the sexual orientation, gender identity, or transgender expression of youth.

Gender-Affirming Care “Shield” Laws

Bans on Conversion Therapy

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