Honoring Pride Month, WMU-Cooley Law School hosted a virtual discussion on June 14 with Christine A. Yared, an attorney, educator, and activist. The event, “LGBTQIA+ Law: Outrageous Laws & Everyday Rebellions,” was part of the law school’s monthly Community Conversations series.
Yared discussed the history and societal relevance of a handful of the 200-300 laws that she cites as anti-LGBTQIA+. Some laws reviewed included gender confirmation treatments and procedures and how they relate to child abuse, transgender athletes and requirements to compete in activities as defined at birth, and gender markers on birth certificates and driver’s licenses.
“There's a younger generation that sees things differently, that sees and understands a spectrum for gender identity, a spectrum for sexuality, and they have a comfort with it,” said Yared.
Yared reviewed root causes of social problems within the current environment. Notable root causes she discussed are demographics, the fear of change, science, and law and policy in relation to religion and sex.
Florida and Michigan are at different places with nondiscrimination laws, said Yared, “Florida does now have a nondiscrimination law that applies to sexual orientation and gender identity. The Michigan Supreme Court should decide this month whether sexual orientation and gender identity or expression will be added Michigan’s civil rights law.”
Yared has been practicing law for over three decades. As an attorney, writer, speaker, educator, and activist, she is an advocate for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, and has fought against discrimination based on LGBTQIA+ identity, gender, race, religion, ethnicity, and against sexual harassment.
Yared said, “You can use social media in such a positive way and I encourage you to do so. I encourage you to place yourself as an educator, people will, and already have, looked up to you because of your work in the law, and so become that person. As a law student, we're about persuasion and, you know that you're going to persuade.”
The full presentation can be viewed at WMU-Cooley’s YouTube channel.
- Posted June 23, 2022
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
WMU-Cooley Law School holds discussion for Pride Month
headlines Ingham County
- MSU Law Moot Court team of two 3L students emerges national champions at First Amendment Competiton in D.C.
- MSU Law captivated by prominent Harvard professor analyzing artificial intelligence
- OWLS Meeting
- Advocate: Former insurance pro studies in Dual JD program
- Man with disabilities settles accessibility lawsuit
headlines National
- Nikole Nelson champions a national model to bring legal services to those without access
- Social media and your legal career
- OJ Simpson estate accepts $58M claim by father of Ron Goldman, killed along with Nicole Brown Simpson
- Law prof who called for military action and end to Israel sues over teaching suspension
- The advantages of using an AI agent in contract review
- Courthouse rock, political talk lead to potential suspension for Elvis-loving judge




