4. Possible debates.
Can it be argued that gender
What age should the treatment dysphonia could be input unto
should be allowed? you?
Pro. Con .
Pro. Con .
Children, by their Scientif
Some times a For those that Is this right or wrong?
looks and explanations of
young person are completely
activities, toys chromosomes and
might be sure it going to
they are given . ( gene
confused and be unfair, and
go through they would socialisation)
the treatment. have to suffer.
This would No free
help. choice.
Pro. Con .
Scientific Religion, you
explanations of should be how
how the person you are born, and
feels ( right). act within your
gender roles.
Reproduction.
5. Layout of Documentary
Gender Dysphoria
Episode 1:
How gender is created. Nature vs. Nurture.
Episode 2:
How can toys and activities determines you
gender.
Episode 3:
The media, family, education and workplace
influence.
Episode 4:
Gender Dysphoria.
6. Gender Dysphoria
What is gender Dysphoria?
Gender dysphoria • They have a strong desire to
is a condition in live according to their gender
which a person identity, rather than their
feels that there is a biological sex.
mismatch between • Some people undergo
their biological sex treatment so that their
and their gender physical appearance is more
identity consistent with their gender
identity.
For example, a person
may have the anatomy
of a man, but gender
identify as a woman.
7. Some symptoms.
The symptoms of gender
Adults with gender
dysphoria can appear at a
dysphoria can feel
very young age. For
trapped inside a body
example, a child may
that does not match
refuse to wear typical
their gender identity.
boys' or girls' clothes, or
This can cause feelings
dislike taking part in
of discomfort and
typical boys' or girls'
anxiety
games and activities
In most cases, this type of behaviour
is just a normal part of growing
up, but in cases of gender
dysphoria, it persists into later
childhood and through to adulthood.
8. More information
It is estimated that 1 in 11,500 people
experience gender dysphoria.
Scientific explanation.
Boys are XY
Girls are XX
• When this chromosomes get together it already produces the sex cells, Which
immediately sends a message to the brain and the foetus is already born knowing
what gender they are .
• However children with gender dysphoria is when this happens , but the message isn't
send to the brain properly, therefore they are mixed between their sex and their
gender.
9. Another possibility.
one in 100 or so babies is born with some
kind of sex differentiation anomaly
This can also cause
gender dysphoria.
This can be caused when the pregnant
mother has additional hormones in her
system, which she has absorbed from,
say, medication or the environment, and
which she has passed on to the foetus,
Such as :
or the foetus,
47,XXY, 47,XYY, 45,XO, 49,XXXYY
With this it can cause
strange chromosomes
pattern.
10. Gender dysphoria in children.
• Very rarely, children may express this incongruence between gender identity and
the genital sex.
• Symptoms of unease with the assigned gender role
• If these children are unable to express their awkwardness, their discomfort may
grow through adolescence and into adulthood
• as families and society, in ignorance of their primary gender identity, relentlessly
reinforce gender roles in accordance with their physical appearance alone
• However, some children are able to express a strong cross-sex
identification, and sometimes insist on living in the opposite role.
Such as wearing the other gender clothing and habbits.
11. Some effects.
• Those who are not treated in adolescence may continue to struggle to conform
they may start on relationships, marriages and parenthood in an attempt to lead
‘normal’ lives
• however, they may be unable to continue with the farce of presenting themselves
as something they know they are not
• This sometimes lead people into depression and it serious cases suicide.
12. Legal Issues.
• If you have undergone the treatment know as transition, which is
- Living a year in the gender you prefer
- Surgery
Then you are known as a transsexual with this legal rights come along.
• In the UK, driving licences and passports may be re-issued according
to the individual’s post-transition gender status.
• The Gender Recognition Act (2004)has been in operation since 2005.
This Act enables trans men and women to obtain a Gender
Recognition Certificate and (as long as the birth was originally
registered in the UK) they may obtain a new birth certificate.
• They are now able to marry in their newly recognised gender.
• The Sex Discrimination Act (Gender Reassignment) Regulations
protect trans people against discrimination in the workplace.
13. This is how some children can be
forced away from gender
dysphonia, and sometimes this is
how they start to find out.
15. Gender stereotypes.
• Roughly at the age of 3 children already know their gender roles.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-VqsbvG40Ww
Kids were asked questions about gender
roles.
Children had to choose which doll does which type of job.
17. Was the ban of hijab in Debates Is islamophobia just
France a Islamophic racism within a
act, and was it right? religion?
CON CON
PRO PRO The way they
look linked
Obey by the rules Free choice, and Yes as it is the
of the country with the way
respect for religion that
and culture. they act.
religion. makes them do
what they do.
Are Muslims the
ones that caused
all of this?
PRO CON
They act the way
they do and there is The media created
the consequence, so this and that’s what
they created brought fear of
islamophobia. Muslims to the world.
18. Layout of the documentary
Inequalities within multiculturalism.
Episode 1:
The different cultures in London, habit and living standards.
Episode 2:
Success within foreigners. ( effort)
Episode 3:
The representation of woman in different cultures.
Episode 4:
Islamophobia
20. What is Islamophobia?
• Islamophobia represents the prejudice
against, hate or fear of, Muslims.
• The term dates back to the early 1900s, but its
modern use originates during the late 1980s
or early 1990s
• It is considered the fear and dislike of all
muslims.
21. Some information
• Islamophobia is anti-Muslim feeling and violence
are based on “race” and/or religion.
• Islamophobia may also target people who have
Muslim names, or have a look that is associated
with Muslims. i.e.: in the London bombs in 2006 where the
police shot an innocent man , just because they though he
looked Muslim.
According to Alan Johnson, Islamophobia
sometimes can be nothing more than prejudice or
racism "wrapped in religious terms."
22. Some views on Islam
• Islam is seen as a huge alliance, fixed and unresponsive to change.
• It does not have values in common with other cultures, is not affected by them and does
not influence them.
• It is seen as inferior to the West. It is seen as brutal, irrational, primitive, and sexist.
• It is seen as violent, aggressive, threatening, supportive of terrorism, and engaged in a
clash of civilizations.
• It is seen as a political ideology, used for political or military advantage.
• Criticisms made of "the West" by Muslims are rejected out of hand.
• Aggression towards Islam is used to justify discriminatory practices towards Muslims and
exclusion of Muslims from mainstream society.
• Anti-Muslim aggression is seen as natural and normal.
23. A sociologist Isabel maranci says the following about
Islamophobia.
•The increasing Islamophobia in the West is related to a rising denial
of multiculturalism.
•Islam is widely regarded as the most resistant culture against
Western, democratic values and its Judaeo-Christian heritage.
• "Islamophobia is a ‘phobia’ of multiculturalism and the effect that Islam
can have in Europe and the West through cultural processes.
24. A Yemeni response to cultural
islamophobia
•hundreds of Yemenis gathered in front of the American Embassy.
•The angry protesters succeeded in climbing the walls of the embassy
and to set some cars in its parking lot into fire. The protest left three
people killed and more than 30 wonded according to some media
reports but no causalities among the Americans
25. Islamophobia website
• The islamophobia website is a Muslim website where
they are trying to defend themselves and as well
bring peace.
• There are videos uploads with some debates.
• And there are also a link to where you can donate
money to stop islamophobia.
27. FUTURE ...
The day will come when: ( Muslims hope.)
1 British Muslims participate fully and confidently at all levels in the political, cultural, social and
economic life of the country
2 Islamophobic behaviour is recognised as unacceptable and is no longer be tolerated in public.
Whenever it occurs people in positions of leadership
3 Legal sanctions against religious discrimination in employment and service
delivery offences aggravated by religious hostility are dealt with severely
4 The need of young British Muslims to develop their religious and cultural identity in a British
context is accepted and supported
28. How is manifestation of anti Muslim in
Britain.
• attacks on mosques and desecration of Muslim cemeteries
• widespread and routine negative stereotypes in the media, including the
broadsheets, and
in the conversations and ‘common sense’ of non-Muslims.
• people talk and write about Muslims in ways that would not be acceptable if the
reference were to Jewish people, for
example, or to black people
• negative stereotypes and remarks in speeches by political leaders.
the claim that Muslims more than others must choose between ‘the British way’ and
‘theterrorist way
•verbal and physical attacks on Muslims in
public places