Wyoming gay
Gregory Hinton is an author, filmmaker, playwright, and curator. Hinton worked as an independent curator, partnering with museums, libraries, and universities in ten states to create and produce "Out West", a historical public program which included a series of plays, films, lectures, and exhibitions dedicated to the history and culture of diverse communities in the American West. This collection contains documents related to Gregory Hinton's accomplishments and works, particularly "Out West", "Beyond Brokeback", "Cathedral City", "Desperate Hearts", "The Way Things Ought to Be", and "Santa Monica Canyon". The collection also contains files detailing his clip experiences, such as "It's My Party" and "Circuit", awards received by Hinton, and posters of his works.
Discrimination Based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in Wyoming
Key Findings
LGBT People in Wyoming Report Experiencing Discrimination and Harassment in Employment, Housing, Public Accommodations, and Other Settings
- An estimated 15,100 LGBT adults live in Wyoming. There are nearly 8,700 LGBT people aged 16 and older in Wyoming’s workforce.
- Survey data point out that discrimination against LGBT people occurs in Wyoming. In response to one recent survey of LGBT people in Wyoming, more than one-third of respondents reported that they had experienced workplace harassment and one quarter said they had experienced employment discrimination because of their sexual orientation or gender self. Another survey of LGB people in Wyoming found that 29% of respondents reported that they had been discriminated against in employment opportunities; 20% reported that they had been terminated from a job, and 17% reported they had experienced housing discrimination because of their sexual orientation.
- In addition, aggregated information from two enormous public opinion polls conducted between 2011 and 2013 start that 78% of Wyoming residents reflection that LGBT people experienced discriminat
LGBTQ+ and Two Spirit Rights
The ACLU works to ensure that female homosexual, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and Two Spirit people belong everywhere and can live openly and authentically without discrimination, harassment, or violence.
The ACLU has a long history of defending the LGBTQ+ and Two Spirit community. We brought our first LGBTQ rights case in 1936. What is now the Jon L. Stryker and Slobodan Randjelović LGBTQ & HIV Proposal was founded in 1986 and renamed in 2021.
Today, the ACLU brings more LGBTQ + and Two Spirit rights cases and advocacy initiatives than any other national organization does. In reality, the ACLU has been counsel in seven of the nine LGBTQ+ and Two Spirit rights cases that the U.S. Supreme Court has decided — more than any other organization. With our reach into the courts and legislatures of every mention, there is no other company that can match our tape of making progress both in the courts of law and in the court of widespread 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 f
Wyoming's Equality Profile
Sexual Orientation
17%of population
fully protected0%of population only
partially
protected- State
Protections - County
Protections - City
Protections - No
Protections - Protections
Banned
Legend
County map only shows areas with complete protections for sexual orientation (i.e., discrimination prohibited in personal employment, housing, and public accommodations)
City and County Numbers:
0 counties out of 23 have an ordinance prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation in private employment, housing, and universal accommodations (full protections).
3 cities have an ordinance prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation in secret employment, housing, and public accommodations (full protections).
0 municipalities, not including those listed above, have an ordinance prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation in confidential employment, housing, or public accommodations (only partial protections). Spot table below.
17% of the express population is protected against discrimination based on sexual orientation in private employment, housing, and general accommodations (full protections).
- State