The Beijing LGBT Center was founded in 2008 as a cultural outlet for various LGBT service organizations based in Beijing. In its early days, its primary mission was to organize cultural activities, aiming to address a perceived lack of stability and unity within the local LGBT community.|241x241pxOne of the center's first advocacy initiatives involved educating psychologists in China about
conversion therapy. In 2014, the center helped Yang Teng, a gay man, prepare a case against a clinic in
Chongqing that had provided him with conversion therapy that included
electroshock therapy. The case was successful, and a local court in Beijing eventually declared conversion therapy for "curing" gay people to be illegal altogether. Still, the practice of conversion therapy persisted in China. Center employee John Shen and others later went undercover for a 2015 episode of
Channel 4's
Unreported World, revealing that hospitals continued to provide electroconvulsive conversion therapy. The center's research efforts included the administration of the Chinese Gender and Sexual Minorities Psychological Health Survey and a 2017 survey with
Peking University on the mental health of transgender Chinese people. Other forms of activism organized by the center were meant to replace
pride parades, which were frequently forbidden by authorities. The center also partnered with photographer Teo Butturini to create
Humans of New York-style portraits of LGBT individuals living in China. == Crackdown and closure ==