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Breakout Sessions at the #SaferToBeMe Conference
Please note times listed are UK time however if you are viewing from outside the UK they may appear in your local time. If so, please check the programme page to confirm the UK time.
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
৯:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 1 (Global):
Dismantling Myths, Misconceptions and Misunderstandings of LGBTQI+ People
This session looks closely at the myths, misconceptions, and misunderstandings of what I call the 3Ms that continue to shape how LGBTQI+ people are viewed and treated in many parts of the world. These beliefs often seem like common knowledge, cultural values, or even scientific fact. But in reality, they are rooted in misinformation, fear, and political strategy. We’ll examine three core myths: that being LGBTQI+ is not normal, that it can or should be changed, and that it is dangerous to society. We'll trace where these ideas come from, why they persist, and how they are used sometimes quietly, sometimes aggressively to justify discrimination, violence, and exclusion. We’ll also explore the systems and authorities that help keep these myths in place: from governments and religious institutions to education and media. Rather than only presenting information, this session will also focus on how these ideas can be unlearnt. We'll explore how storytelling, strategic communication, and persistent advocacy have helped shift public understanding. This session is meant for anyone interested in challenging the harmful narratives that surround LGBTQI+ communities whether in their work, their organising, or their day-to-day conversations.

Diego Garcia Blum
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
৯:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 1 (Global): Draining the Lifeline: HIV Services, Austerity & LGBTQI+ Health under Populist Rule in Latin America
This paper explores how rising populist regimes in Latin America are reshaping the landscape of HIV services, disproportionately impacting LGBTQI+ communities. Amid economic austerity and shifting political priorities, funding for HIV prevention and treatment programs has been slashed, often under ideological agendas that marginalize queer and trans lives. Focusing on Brazil under Jair Bolsonaro and Mexico under Andrés Manuel López Obrador, this study investigates how these leaders have deprioritised HIV services through both budget cuts and the erasure of LGBTQI+ narratives from public health campaigns. While Brazil has seen a direct rollback of federal support and anti-LGBTQI+ rhetoric from political leaders, Mexico presents a more complex picture where economic populism coexists with uneven engagement on queer health. Through analysis of policy documents, media discourse, and activist responses, this paper argues that HIV care is not just a public health issue, but a political battle with lived impacts of these shifts, particularly on trans women and gay men, the paper highlights how health becomes a site where power, populism, and queer survival intersect and where resistance is urgent.

Jessica Peck
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
৯:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 1 (Global): Labels in an Era of Populism: Time to Reassess ‘Rainbow’ Acronyms & Initialisms?
Language and labels have shaped how we understand sexuality and gender throughout history to the present day. This is most obviously witnessed by the ever-lengthening initialism 'LGBTIQ+' (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans, Intersex, Questioning /Queer, plus), which has been lengthened by some to the staggering twelve character super-initialism ‘LGBTQQIP2SAA+’, a sort of alphabetical version of the rainbow flag, which as one of the original symbols of LGBTQ+ inclusion, has also continued to evolve over recent years in its attempt to visually symbolise the entire Queer community in a single design. In history, culture, politics, education and modern social and scientific studies, the ever-evolving use of acronyms to try to wield together a diverse and sometimes conflicting set of identities raises many questions. At a time of populism, the rise of new homophobia and transphobia, and rollback on diversity programmes, we ask whether these terms serve our interests given differences in generational and global preferences, and situational alternatives such as SOGIESC, MSM and Queer. We ask how practical these labels are, what risk of exclusion they create, and whether there is some validity to what critics see as inappropriate and excessive usage. The presentation cannot provide answers to all these complex issues but aims to provoke discussion, summarise how we arrived here.

Ross Othen-Reeves and Simon Williams
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
৯:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 1 (Global): Queer in Our Own Tongues: Reclaiming Queer Narratives in South Asia
How do you speak about queerness in places where there’s no word for it in the local language and where the words that do exist are often seen as foreign, even threatening? In South Asia, queerness has long existed in many forms through folk traditions, community roles like the hijra, and deeply personal stories passed through generations. But much of today’s language and education around LGBTQ+ rights comes from Western frameworks. This disconnect often makes local communities feel like queerness is something imported, not something rooted in their own history and culture. This session will explore how queer educators and activists across South Asia especially in India are challenging this idea by reclaiming queer stories through local languages, indigenous knowledge, and cultural memory. It draws on field research with organizations working in rural and urban communities ts of South Asian queer lives. Together, well look at how group-based learning spaces like peer-led classrooms, community gatherings, and online collectives are reshaping how queerness is taught and understood. These spaces don’t just resist erasure; they create belonging. This session is for anyone interested in how education can be a tool of resistance, how decolonization shows up in everyday language, and how South Asian communities are creating new pathways for queer activism.

Pranav Arwari
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
৯:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 1 (UK): A Manifesto to Break the Cyclical Abuse & Erasure of Trans+ People
Trans people are facing an unprecedented amount of abuse, attention, and acrimony. The harm this is causing is not yet fully known, yet the community has had to shelve progress in order to prioritise survival. In our current system - a dystopian version of our lives - trans people have become a political punchbag, a byword for everything woke, something society has been conditioned to hate. Yet this is nothing new, it is a timeline we have seen play out time and time again. Why are trans people so often the face of hatred and dismissal? Trans people are not the reason that the economy is in a poor position. Trans people are not a danger to society. Trans people are not an issue, full stop. This presentation will show the ways transphobia is a cyclical event born out of fear, distraction, and eugenic ideology. Combining historical examples of transphobia, the ripple effect this caused, the surprising unified response, and show this is a cycle we should be aiming to disrupt. It also aims to highlight that the struggle of trans people does not need to be just a burden for trans people. Highlighting the observation of the course of history, inaction will lead to further devastation for all marginalised folks, as in 2025 progress is not a linear thing. This presentation aims to cut through this noise and create a clear pathway. Building on a climate of misinformation, trans panic, political hostility, and fake news, this presentation will move the needle in favour of trans people. By utilising allyship & empathy, and connecting it with trans history, this presentation will create much-needed counter perspectives.

Ben Pechey
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
৯:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 1 (UK): Empowering Rural Voices: The Transformative Impact of Our School Pride Club
In 2019, our school transitioned from hosting occasional LGBTQIA+ events to establishing a weekly Pride Club, designed to create a safe space. The club quickly grew, empowering students aged 11-18 and fostering a more inclusive environment across the school. Today, we see a profound transformation in how our school and community approach diversity, inclusion, and LGBTQIA+ identities. Inspired by a village primary school, we pursued the Rainbow Flag Award. This initiative helped us embrace the LGBTQIA+ community and integrate it into the school’s identity. Our presentation, led by Pride Club members, will explore the club's growth and far-reaching impact, emphasising the importance of allyship, role models, and empowerment in rural areas. At the core of our Pride Clubs development has been a commitment to creating a space where all students regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity feel seen, heard, and valued. With help from BOOST and LGBTQIA+ role models, we havtheir authentic selves. These friends have shown our students that they can thrive and succeed, inspiring them to live openly and proudly in their communities.As Pride Club expanded, we realised that promoting inclusivity is about more than providing a safe space for LGBTQIA+ individuals. Its about building a community of allies. Over time, students from all backgrounds have joined the club, participating in initiatives that support the LGBTQIA+ community. Whether through hosting events or encouraging positive classroom discussions, allies have played a key role in promoting equity within our school and rural area. Though challenges remain in promoting LGBTQIA+ visibility and acceptance in our rural setting, the resilience of our students and staff has kept us moving forward. Empowerment comes through education, dialogue, and perseverance, and we believe that supporting young people in rural areas makes a lasting difference in their lives.

Rosie Bush
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
৯:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 1 (UK): From Margins to Table: Resisting Power & Reclaiming Place in LGBTQI+ Health Equity Movements
This session explores how grassroots activism and community-led approaches can challenge systemic inequalities and drive inclusive health systems reform for LGBTQI+ populations locally, nationally, and globally. Drawing on two decades of experience across public health, advocacy, and systems transformation from community resilience in Greater Manchester to global health diplomacy with international bodies this session traces how power, populism, and politics have been weaponised against LGBTQI+ people and how we resist. Through storytelling, policy reflection, and case examples from the UK, Southern Africa, and Europe, we will unpack how local voices can influence global policy, even amidst shrinking civic space, backlash, and austerity. Participants will learn how queer-led research, inclusive commissioning, and participatory evaluation frameworks can become tools of resistance and change. This session will not just expose the harm of systemic neglect, it will highlight tangible, effective, responses: from challenging erasure in data to reimagining community engagement in health system design. Attendees will leave with practical takeaways on building alliances, creating sustainable change within hostile environments, and re-centring lived experience in decision-making. Presented accessibly, this session is ideal for activists, service providers, policymakers, and community organisers committed to health equity, social justice, and dismantling oppressive systems wherever they operate, from the local to the global.

Dr Harvey Kennedy-Pitt
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
১১:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 2 (Global): Hijacked Narratives: The Populist Playbook to Strip LGBTQ+ Rights
What happens when populist leaders and anti-rights groups use LGBTQ+ language not to protect us, but to take our rights away? In this session, we expose a growing political strategy: the systematic hijacking of LGBTQ+ narratives by populist actors to push regressive agendas. These actors frame themselves as defenders of human rights while using our words like freedom, care, or diversityto justify policy rollbacks, institutional infiltration, and the erasure of our identities. We focus on a case study from Argentina, where a group of parents aligned with anti-rights discourse aimed they were protecting their children from so-called gender conversion by LGBTQ+ activists. This fabricated narrative gained institutional support and was later echoed in a presidential decree that restricted trans minors access to gender recognition. The same actors were publicly celebrated for defending human rights. Through this case, we explore the cultural control, narrative inversion, and legal dismantling of progress. Participants will engage with real examples and reflect on how these tactics appear globally, beyond Argentina. This workshop is for those who want to understand how symbolic violence precedes legal and social regression and how to resist it. Together, we will discuss strategies to recognize, disrupt, and reclaim our narratives through activism, memory, policy, and communication.

Andrea Rivas
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
১১:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 2 (Global): LGBTQ+ Inclusion in Humanitarian Action: Roles & Needs of International Organisations
Humanitarian and development organisations love to talk about inclusion and inclusive programming, but what does this actually mean? This session seeks to explore a few key questions that need to be answered before humanitarian responses can become more inclusive of LGBTQ+ populations, including: What is an inclusive humanitarian response? What is the role of international organisations (such as the UN and larger humanitarian organisations) in realising an inclusive humanitarian response? What do these organisations and their staff need to know about LGBTQ+ rights, capacities, and strengths in order to be true allies?

Lizzie Wright
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
১১:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 2 (Global): Queer Arab Languages: The Role of Power, Cultural Identities and Westernisation
In a world where languages are always evolving and diversifying, authoritarian regimes in the Arab World have spent a lot of effort to silence the voices of queer people living in the region, and they dictate what can be said and what can't be. Politically it is something prevalent in official spaces to prevent opportunities to queer people to speak their minds or demand their rights. We can also see this with the pinkwashing happening in Palestine by the Israeli Occupation Forces. Language is power, and power means visibility. In this talk, Moka will draw attention to the ever-evolving terms and speech used by Arab queers, and how language can be used as a tool of resistance against fascism in public and private spaces. **Note this session will be presented remotely to delegates in the conference room via video screen**.

Moka Zakareya
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
১১:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 2 (Global): Shariah Law vs. Self-Identity: The Transgender Rights Debate in Pakistan and Muslim countries
In 2018, Pakistan passed the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, a landmark law granting transgender individuals the right to self-identify and access legal protections. However, in 2020, a petition was filed in the Federal Shariat Court (FSC) challenging the Act, arguing that it was incompatible with Islamic principles. The case has reignited a national debate on the intersection of Shariah law, gender identity and human rights in a Muslim-majority country.
This session will examine how Shariah law is being used to challenge transgender identity and expression in Pakistan, exploring:
The key arguments of the petition against the 2018 Act, including concerns over self-identification and the perceived recognition of sexual minorities.
The counter arguments from Islamic scholars and legal experts who support transgender rights within an Islamic framework.
The role of Pakistan’s parallel legal system (civil vs. Shariah law) in shaping the rights of transgender individuals, Islamic rulings, including fatwas from Tantawi and Khomeini, as well as the legal precedent set by Malaysia’s court ruling decriminalising gender expression.
The session will also provide insights into how transgender activists in Pakistan are navigating this legal and religious landscape, working to protect their rights within an Islamic framework while countering misinformation.
Whether you are a legal expert, activist, policymaker, or simply interested in the complexities of religion, law, and gender identity, this session will offer a thought-provoking and balanced discussion.

Nayyab Ali
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
১১:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 2 (UK): From Exclusion to Inclusion – The Journey Home - LGBTQ+ Service Personnel in the UK Armed Forces
This session explores the history of how lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender personnel have been treated within the UK armed forces. The discussion is framed by the lived experiences of the speaker, offering personal insights into this journey. It traces the path from the complete exclusion of LGBTQ+ individuals following the 1967 Sexual Offences Act, through to the landmark ruling by the European Court of Human Rights that overturned the ban, and ultimately to the ongoing campaign for recognition and reparations for veterans affected by that policy. The session reflects on the injustices faced by those who wished to serve but were denied the opportunity because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. Through a timeline of events, attendees will learn how the fight for justice led to an acknowledgment by the State that it had failed these individuals, culminating in an official apology and recognition of the harm caused by an unlawful policy. Additionally, the session examines how the UK armed forces have evolved to become Employers of Choice for members of the LGBTQ+ community, and how serving personnel have worked to welcome veteran sailors, soldiers, and aviators back into the military family.

Kevin Bazeley
২৩ অক্ট ো, ২০২৫
১১:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 2 (UK): How Do We Solve the UK LGBTQ+ Mental Health Crisis?
Join The Mind Bender, Daniel Browne, for this informative, engaging, and empowering talk on preserving and protecting LGBTQ+ people's mental health in the face of increasing hate and hostility globally. It's a sad fact that mental health issues are more prevalent among LGBTQ+ people, but why is that and how can the mental health crisis in our communities be solved? Come with an open mind, ideas and questions, as your voice matters in this discussion. Learn some useful techniques for supporting your own mental health, and hear about what can be done worldwide to get through the current LGBTQ+ mental health crisis.

Daniel Browne
২৩ অক্টো, ২০২৫
১১:১৫ AM
Breakout Session 2 (UK): Trans Healthcare for UK Trans Youth - Pushing against The Cass Review
Clinical psychologist view: Dr Heather Wood is a Clinical Psychologist and previously worked at the Tavistock Gender Identity Development Service for over 10 years. She was one of the Clinical Leads within the service that provided Trans Healthcare to young gender diverse people. This included access to Puberty Blockers and Gender Affirming Hormones via NHS Endocrinology Services. However, following the publication of the highly flawed Cass Report, NHS England made a politically influenced decision to close the GIDS Services. And the new services designed by NHS England and Hilary Cass are not fit for purpose and are denying access to Hormone Blockers and Gender Affirming Hormones as recognised treatments for young people in the UK. They are proposing a highly unethical research project in relation to Puberty Blockers that again, is not fit for purpose. Dr Wood aims to shine a light on these issues and to highlight ways that we can push back against these restrictions in Trans Healthcare that are deeply damaging to Trans Youth in the UK.







