National lesbian rights

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Minter added, “I have devoted my more than 30-year legal career to working at NCLR, an organization committed to putting the community first, supporting LGBTQ people and their families, and using the power of the courts to fight for a better and more just world.
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For non-LGBTQ issues, please contact your local ACLU affiliate.

The ACLU Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Project seeks to create a just society for all LGBTQ people regardless of race or income.

NCLR was founded in 1977 by Donna Hitchens, who went on to become the first openly lesbian judge elected to the bench in the United States, and Roberta Achtenberg, the first openly LGBTQ person appointed to a position requiring U.S. Senate confirmation.

“At a time when the LGBTQ community is facing increasing attacks, it is critical that we are crystal clear that we represent the entire community,” Rupert-Gordon said.

Starting today, we will be known as National Center for LGBTQ Rights. 

Since 1977, NCLR’s mission has been to advance the civil rights of all LGBTQ people. ...

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In June 2014, NCLR launched Born Perfect, a program to end conversion therapy, by passing laws across the country to protect LGBTQ children and young people, fighting in courtrooms to ensure their safety, and raising awareness about the serious harms caused by these dangerous practices.

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With a commitment to racial and economic justice and our community’s most vulnerable, NCLR is a leader at the forefront of advancing civil and human rights for LGBTQ individuals and their families through impact litigation, public policy, and public education.

With a commitment to racial and economic justice and our community’s most vulnerable, NCLR is a leader at the forefront of advancing civil and human rights for LGBTQ individuals and their families through impact litigation, public policy, and public education.

LGBTQ Rights

The ACLU has a long history of defending the LGBTQ community.

After more than a decade of discussion, NCLR is changing our name!

The organization was revolutionary because it recognized that lesbian women faced unique legal challenges that were not being addressed by existing gay rights organizations, which tended to focus on issues more relevant to gay men.

By creating specialized legal advocacy for lesbians, particularly around family law issues, NCLR helped establish new areas of civil rights law that would benefit the entire LGBTQ community.

Hitchens’ and Achtenberg’s initial goal was to provide legal support to lesbian mothers fearful of losing custody of their children after coming out, which very quickly expanded to advocating on behalf of gay parents living with HIV, transgender parents, asylum seekers, and young people seeking justice in schools and on the playing fields.  

Since its founding, NCLR has become a leading national impact litigation organization, taking on Prop 8, winning marriage equality in California and nationally, defending transgender servicemembers, fighting for health care for LGBTQ people, and defending laws protecting LGBTQ youth from conversion therapy. 

“NCLR’s feminist roots have always called on us to support and amplify the most underrepresented communities and those often left out of the mainstream movements,” says Imani Rupert-Gordon, President of NCLR.

Founded in 1986, the Jon L. Stryker and Slobodan Randjelović LGBTQ & HIV Project brings more LGBTQ rights cases and advocacy initiatives than any other national organization does and has been counsel in seven of the nine LGBTQ rights cases that the U.S. Supreme Court has decided. Since this administration took office, NCLR has filed four lawsuits challenging discriminatory and unconstitutional executive orders, and we are preparing for additional litigation,” said NCLR Legal Director Shannon Minter.

With our reach into the courts and legislatures of every state, there is no other organization that can match our record of making progress both in the courts of law and in the court of public opinion.

The ACLU’s current priorities are to end discrimination, harassment and violence toward transgender people, to close gaps in our federal and state civil rights laws, to prevent protections against discrimination from being undermined by a license to discriminate, and to protect LGBTQ people in and from the criminal legal system.

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“Without losing touch with our roots, NCLR will continue its nearly 50-year commitment to protecting the most vulnerable members of our community, forging new partnerships, and working toward a day when every LGBTQ person can live with full dignity, equality, and freedom under the law.”

“This change reflects what has always been true: NCLR works tirelessly to defend, protect and advance the entire LGBTQ community.

national lesbian rights

Our Work

We want to share some exciting news with you. Through litigation, lobbying, public education, and organizing, we work to build a country where our communities can live openly without discrimination and enjoy equal rights, personal autonomy, and freedom of expression and association.

After nearly 50 years as a leading LGBTQ civil rights organization, the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) announced Monday that it is changing its name to the National Center for LGBTQ Rights (NCLR) to better reflect its longtime commitment to advocacy on behalf of the full LGBTQ community.

We brought our first LGBTQ rights case in 1936. And we have done just that. I am excited that our new name captures and expands that spirit and vision.”

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NCLR’s original name reflected the fact that it was the first national LGBTQ organization to be founded by women.