'' in 1902, describing the detention of an indigenous "man-woman" in
Viedma,
Río Negro In 1997,
Asociación de Lucha por la Identidad Travesti-Transsexual was created to defend the rights of transgender people. One of its first victories came in 2006 when the Supreme Court overturned a lower court's ruling that had stated that transgender people did not have a legal right to organize and campaign for their rights. In 2007, the Supreme Court ruled that a 17-year-old had the legal right to go through the sex change process and have her legal documents changed to reflect the operation. In 2009,
Marcela Romero won the legal right to have her identity changed and was given an honorary title by the government. She was awarded the Honorable Congresswoman of the year. Romero remains one of the leading advocates for the human rights of transgender people in Argentina. In 2012, senators unanimously approved the "Gender Law". In mid-2018, the
Santa Fe Province cities of
Rosario and
Santa Fe announced the incorporation of several trans people to the Historical Reparation program, which gives
pensions to victims of the
last military dictatorship. Newspaper
Página/12 considered that "the action, unprecedented at a national level and throughout Latin America, establishes a new standard in public policies." On June 18, 2018, a Buenos Aires court sentenced Gabriel David Marino to life imprisonment for the murder of transgender activist
Diana Sacayán. For the first time in history, the Argentine Justice acknowledged that the murder was "a
hate crime against the travesti identity", known as "travesticide" or "transvesticide" On March 1, 2019, trans activist
Lara María Bertolini was allowed to change her official sex to the
transfeminine non-binary label "
travesti femininity" through a judicial ruling that was considered a landmark for the travesti movement. Buenos Aires judge Myriam Cataldi felt that the Gender Identity Law applied to Bertolini's case, citing the law's definition of "gender identity" as: "the internal and individual experience of gender as each person feels it, which may or may not correspond to the sex assigned at birth, including the personal experience of the body." On March 19, 2019,
Neuquén Province announced a pension for trans people who are older than forty years and do not have registered employment. They will receive a monthly economic contribution as part of a Historical Reparation program, which "recognizes the systematic violation of their rights". On 20 July 2021, President
Alberto Fernández signed Decreto 476/2021, mandating the National Registry of Persons (RENAPER) to allow a third gender option on all
national identity cards and
passports, marked as an "X". The measure applies to non-citizen permanent residents who possess Argentine identity cards as well. In compliance with the 2012 Gender Identity Law, this made Argentina one of the few countries in the world to
legally recognize non-binary gender on all official documentation. The 2022 national census, carried out less than a year after the resolution was implemented, counted 8,293 (roughly 0.02%) of the country's population identifying with the "X / other" gender marker. == Gender Identity Law ==