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124 Penn St. L. Rev. 247 (2019-2020)
I Now Pronoun-ce You: A Proposal for Pronoun Protections for Transgender People

handle is hein.journals/dlr124 and id is 255 raw text is: 






I  Now Pronoun-ce You: A Proposal for
Pronoun Protections for Transgender People


Erin E. Clawson*


                             ABSTRACT

      Title VII  of the  Civil Rights Act  protects  employees  from
 discrimination because of sex, which the Supreme Court found includes
 gender and sex/gender stereotyping. The circuit courts, however, are split
 on whether discrimination against transgender people is because of sex.
 In the circuits that extend Title VII's protection to transgender people, the
 courts differ as to whether a claim must be based on sex stereotyping or
 based on a person's status as transgender or transitioning alone. This issue
 was recently granted certiorari by the Supreme Court.
     Not  only do the circuit courts conflict but government agencies
 disagree on this matter as well. In 2014, the Department  of Justice
 considered discrimination against transgender people to be because of sex
 but rescinded this policy in 2017. Conversely, the Equal Employment
 Opportunity Commission  regards discrimination based on  transgender
 status as discrimination because of sex under Title VII.
     Currently, no  federal law exists that provides  protections for
transgender people in the workplace. Proposed acts that have aimed to
provide  protections have failed, due to their broad protections and
conservative opposition. However,  two  states have passed laws  that
prevent against discrimination by the systematic misuse of one's preferred
pronouns, known   as misgendering, but were met  with claims of First
Amendment   free speech violations.
     This Comment  will first examine the concepts of sex, gender, gender
identity, and gender expression, and their relation to the transgender
community.  Next,  this Comment  will discuss federal protections for
transgender people, First Amendment  rights in the workplace, and the
Circuit Split. Finally, this Comment will recommend that the Supreme
Court hold that Title VII protects transgender people based on (1) their

    * J.D. Candidate, The Pennsylvania State University, Penn State Law, 2020. I extend
the sincerest thanks to my husband, Jake, for his unending love and support throughout
every journey we embark on. I am also eternally grateful to my parents for instilling in me
the passion to pursue my goals and believing in me every step of the way.


247

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