Intended Audience
The Margaret Brent Lecture of the 23rd Annual WGSX Colloquium: “Trans Liberation in our Lifetime - Past, Present and Future” by Isa Noyola
Isa Noyola is a first-generation Mexican translatina. She is a seasoned organizer, experienced facilitator, passionate activist, and a national leader in LGBTQ immigrant rights movement. She was the former Deputy Director at the Transgender Law Center and is now the current Deputy Director at Mijente, a political, digital, and grassroots hub for Latinx and Chicanx organizing and movement building. She works extensively for the release of transgender women from ICE detention and an end to all deportations. Isa is also on the executive team of The Women's March board and is one of co-founders of San Francisco’s community-based organization El/La para Translatinas. She has also served on the advisory boards of Familia Trans Queer Liberation, Radical Imagination Family Fund, and the International Trans Fund.
About the Series
The first annual Women Studies colloquium was held March 22-24, 2000. With the support of the Alice McLellan Birney Women Studies Fund, the cross-disciplinary study area in Women, Gender, & Sexuality presents a colloquium each spring in connection with Women’s History Month. Since 2000, the WGSX Colloquium has become an established tradition at St. Mary’s College. This successful annual program has regularly drawn large audiences to events that have offered powerful interdisciplinary combinations of scholarly discourse and artistic expression (including film screenings, theatrical performances, and exhibitions) to discuss a topic critical to women’s lives.
This Year's Theme – Expanding Gender: Trans Experience and Actions
The 2023 Colloquium continues the program’s tradition of engaging with critical intellectual themes, this time focusing on transgender and gender non-conforming populations. In 2020, nearly 80 different anti-transgender legislatures were introduced. In 2021, that number nearly doubled with approximately 150 proposals. In 2022, activists identified about 280 bills currently filed to restrict transgender individuals’ access to healthcare, bathrooms, education, and athletics. Further, violence toward the transgender and gender-non-conforming community highlights intersectionality, with fatal violence disproportionately impacting transgender women of color. This year’s speakers will focus on the experiences and issues facing transgender and gender non-conforming individuals today.