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Showing 116 results for "connecticut policy robs girls athletic opportunities"
  • … Four female athletes from Connecticut are still standing for women’s sports. Selina … a Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) policy that allows men who identify as women to compete in women’s sports. The CIAC’s policy deprived these girls of the recognition for their athletic achievements and …
  • Michael Ross serves as legal counsel for the Center for Academic Freedom with Alliance Defending Freedom
  • … how they lost titles, placements, medals, and advancement opportunities to male athletes. They will show how the lie of … to harm female athletes across the country. But instead, athletic authorities and organizations are putting politics … consequences. And one that specifically harms women and girls. Women and girls deserve better. And we know the truth: …
  • … In Connecticut, boys who identify as female can compete in girlsathletic events. As a result, female athletes like Selina …
  • … In Connecticut, boys who identify as female can compete in girlsathletic events. As a result, female athletes like Selina …
  • … is: Trying to force colleges and universities to open girls’ dorm rooms and locker rooms to males. Redefining “sex” … and in doing so effectively robbing female athletes of opportunities and fairness in women’s sports, undermining …
  • … is: Trying to force colleges and universities to open girls’ dorm rooms and locker rooms to males. Redefining “sex” … and in doing so effectively robbing female athletes of opportunities and fairness in women’s sports, undermining …
  • … is: Trying to force colleges and universities to open girls’ dorm rooms and locker rooms to males. Redefining “sex” … and in doing so effectively robbing female athletes of opportunities and fairness in women’s sports, undermining …
  • … on groundbreaking cases to protect the right of women and girls to fair athletic competition, including Soule v. Connecticut Association of Schools and Hecox v. Little . She … in 2010 from Oak Brook College of Law and Government Policy, where she graduated first in her class. Also in 2010, …
  • … on Title IX. Title IX was passed in 1972 to protect equal opportunities for women, not harm them. Now, the … not biological reality. These changes gut equal opportunities for women, erode student privacy, and threaten … for truth is important—for generations of young women and girls. Thank you in advance for your generosity! … Stand for …