On April 19, 2024, the Department of Education released its final Title IX regulations regarding sexual discrimination in federally-funded
Court rules Biden's Title IX gender identity protections as unconstitutional after a challenge by Tennessee AG.
The legal saga surrounding the 2024 Title IX Regulations reached a new peak earlier this month. On January 9, 2025, the U.S. District Court for
Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti, optimistic after a Kentucky court ruling reversing Biden's Title IX, eyes potential success in his Supreme Court gender case.
In overturning protections for trans students, the court also undid policies aimed at helping sexual assault survivors hold their attackers accountable.
It’s a colossal win for women and girls, and for federalism and the rule of law against the administrative state.
A federal district court judge in Kentucky has struck down President Joe Biden’s effort to protect transgender students and make other changes to Title IX, ruling the U.S. Department of Education violated teachers’ rights by requiring them to use transgender students’ names and pronouns.
Florida assistant coach Taurean Green will continue working with the men's basketball team despite being accused of sexual assault.
The executive order conflicts with laws in California and other blue states that forbid discrimination based on gender identity. The courts are expected to take up the issue.
Both the ACLU and Lambda Legal laid out their plans this week to vigorously oppose an executive order by President Trump which they say requires discrimination against transgender individuals, while advocates in Michigan say the tone of the order has had the effect of making the community,
The previous version of Title IX no longer aligned with federal law, which led to the immediately effective reversion.
A new bill filed in Tennessee and loosely modeled after a Louisiana law currently facing a legal battle would require schools to display the Ten Commandments, a portion of the Declaration of