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'''Gendys''' is a network for all who have encountered gender identity problems personally, transsexuals, transgendered people and gender dysphoric people of either sex, and for those who provide care, both professional and lay.
[[File:Gds.gif|thumb|Gendys logo]]'''Gendys''' (presumably short for "[[gender dysphoria]]") was a network for all who have encountered gender identity problems personally, transsexuals, transgendered people and gender dysphoric people of either sex, and for those who provide care, both professional and lay.


It hopes to help transsexuals and intersexed people to see themselves not as victims, but as survivors of their gender identity difficulties.
It hoped to help transsexuals and intersexed people to see themselves not as victims, but as survivors of their gender identity difficulties.


'''Gendys Conferences''' were held every two years from 1990 to 2004.<ref>http://www.gender.org.uk/conf/</ref>
'''Gendys Conferences''' were held every two years from 1990 to 2004.<ref>http://www.gender.org.uk/conf/ with links to the full content of conference presentations</ref>
The website for GENDYS was last amended in 2013 and it seems to have ceased since.


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==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Trans]]
[[Category:Defunct organisations]]
 
[[Category:Former Consortium members]]

Latest revision as of 13:07, 10 July 2026

Gendys logo

Gendys (presumably short for "gender dysphoria") was a network for all who have encountered gender identity problems personally, transsexuals, transgendered people and gender dysphoric people of either sex, and for those who provide care, both professional and lay.

It hoped to help transsexuals and intersexed people to see themselves not as victims, but as survivors of their gender identity difficulties.

Gendys Conferences were held every two years from 1990 to 2004.[1] The website for GENDYS was last amended in 2013 and it seems to have ceased since.

This article is a stub. You can help the UK LGBT History Project by expanding it.

http://www.gender.org.uk/gendys/

References

  1. http://www.gender.org.uk/conf/ with links to the full content of conference presentations