Columbia Law School: Sexuality and Gender Law Clinic Files Brief in D.C. Circuit Transgender Military Ban Case
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Professor
The Trump administration's efforts to ban transgender individuals from serving in the military--which lower courts have so far prohibited from taking effect--are similar to previous bans on service by people of color, women, and gays and lesbians and have no basis in the law, according to an amicus brief filed today in the
The brief, filed on behalf of various women's rights groups, comes just days after reports that the Trump administration is seeking to define gender by a person's genitalia at birth, with disputes about identity to be settled using genetic testing. The
"This case comes at a critical time in our nation," said Columbia Law School Professor
The clinic's brief comes in a case called
In concluding that transgender service members are "incompatible with sex-based standards," Goldberg writes, Mattis "misses the point that current and aspiring transgender service members do not challenge the application or importance of these standards to military readiness; to the contrary, they seek to serve within these existing standards."
Goldberg cites numerous cases in which disparate treatment has been rejected by the courts, including Sessions v. Morales-Santana, a case in which the
"In short, assumptions that men must be one way and women another, even when rooted in traditional views and practices such as those set out in the Mattis Report, are not sufficient grounds for governmental denial of opportunities to men and women who do not conform to those assumptions but are otherwise qualified and prepared to meet all relevant requirements," Goldberg writes.
In August, Kollar-Kotelly upheld her own previous preliminary injunction in the case in light of Mattis' plan--which would disqualify anyone who has undergone gender transition and most people with a diagnosis of gender dysphoria. Because the Mattis ban would allow people who identify as transgender to serve "in their biological sex," the Trump administration argued the plaintiffs no longer have standing to sue. Kollar-Kotelly rejected that argument.
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Goldberg is one of the country's foremost experts on gender and sexuality law. Before joining
In July, Goldberg and the
Columbia Law clinic students



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