graffiti in
Springfield, Missouri, 2011|alt=Text written in marker that reads "Women's Room Do Not Enter if you Have A DICK!" Like all gender variant people, trans women often face discrimination and transphobia, particularly those who are not
perceived as cisgender. A 2015 survey from
The Williams Institute found that, of 27,715 transgender respondents, 52% whose families had rejected them attempted suicide, as did 64.9% of those who were physically attacked in the past year. A 2011 survey of roughly 3000 trans women living in the United States, as summarized in the report "Injustice at Every Turn: A Report of the National Transgender Discrimination Survey", found trans women reported that: • 36% have lost their job due to their gender. • 55% have been
discriminated against in hiring. • 29% have been denied a promotion. • 24% have been
refused medical care. • 60% of the trans women who have visited a
homeless shelter reported incidents of harassment there. • When displaying identity documents incongruent with their gender identity/expression, 33% have been harassed and 3% have been physically assaulted. • 20% reported harassment by police, with 6% reporting physical assault and 3% reporting sexual assault by an officer. 25% have been treated generally with disrespect by police officers. • Among jailed trans women, 40% have been harassed by inmates, 38% have been harassed by staff, 21% have been physically assaulted, and 20% have been sexually assaulted. The American National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs' report of 2010 anti-LGBTQ violence found that of the 27 people who were murdered because of their LGBTQ identity, 44% were trans women. Discrimination is particularly severe towards non-white trans women, who experience the
intersection of racism and transphobia. In her book
Whipping Girl, trans woman
Julia Serano refers to the unique discrimination trans women experience as "
transmisogyny". Discrimination against trans women has occurred at the
Michigan Womyn's Music Festival after the Festival set out a rule that it would only be a space for cisgender females. This led to protests by trans women and their allies, and a boycott of the Festival by Equality Michigan in 2014. and
GLAAD. The
National Center for Lesbian Rights, and the
National LGBTQ Task Force also signed on to the boycott but later withdrew support. The "womyn-born-womyn" intention first came to attention in 1991 after a
transsexual festival-goer, Nancy Burkholder, was asked to leave the festival when several women recognized her as a trans woman and expressed discomfort with her presence in the space.
Violence towards trans women s carrying the coffin of their murdered friend, August 1987 Trans women face a form of violence sometimes called
trans bashing. The
Washington Blade reported that
Global Rights, an international NGO, tracked the mistreatment of trans women in Brazil, including at the hands of the police. To commemorate those who have been murdered in
hate crimes, an annual
Transgender Day of Remembrance is held in various locations across the United States, Canada, Western Europe, Australia, and New Zealand.
United States According to a 2009 report by the
National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs, quoted by the
Office for Victims of Crime, 11% of all hate crimes towards members of the LGBTQ community were directed towards trans women. In 2015, a false statistic was widely reported in the United States media stating that the life expectancy of trans women of color is only 35 years. This appears to be based on a comment specifically about Latin America in a report by the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which compiled data on the age at death of murdered trans women for all of the Americas (North, South, and Central), and does not disaggregate by race. In 2016, 23 transgender people suffered fatal attacks in the United States. The
Human Rights Campaign report found some of these deaths to be direct results of an anti-transgender
bias, and some due to related factors such as homelessness. One type of violence towards trans women is committed by perpetrators who learn that their sexual partner is transgender, and feel deceived (
"trans panic"). Almost 95% of these crimes were committed by cisgender men towards trans women. According to a 2005 study in Houston, Texas, "50% of transgender people surveyed had been hit by a primary partner after coming out as transgender". ==Media representation==