No. A person born a male who has undergone an operation to become a female is legally considered a female in New Zealand and may not marry another female. The couple can obtain almost all the rights and responsibilities of legal marriage by registering for a Civil Union, except that the couple may not afterwards jointly adopt children.
Yes. Pursuant to a 1994 decision of the New Zealand High Court, a woman wrongly born with male parts who has undergone corrective surgery to create the correct genitalia may afterwards legally marry a male in New Zealand.
Gender identity and sexual orientation are two completely different things. A person can be transsexual and be heterosexual, homosexual, or bi. One has no bearing on the other. Transsexuals don't feel in line with the gender they were assigned at birth, and quite often, realize this in childhood. Their being transsexual doesn't dictate their sexual preference.
Probably not, unless they don't fully transition, or unless they don't get the paperwork corrected. It depends on how the government considers the person. In US states, there are a few which believe in "once male, always male," so in those, post-op transsexual persons can marry the sex that they transition to, since the state doesn't recognize it.
Absolutely not. You are only gay if you are sexually attracted to members of the same gender.
Most likely. Once you correct this birth defect, you are a complete member of the corrected sex. So if you are legally, socially, and physically a woman (to the extent of breasts and a vagina), then you are a woman, and it is only natural and heterosexual for a woman to want to marry a man.
It is estimated that around 1 in 11,500 to 1 in 30,000 assigned males at birth and 1 in 30,000 to 200,000 assigned females at birth pursue bottom surgery as part of their gender transition. These numbers may vary based on different factors such as access to healthcare, societal acceptance, and personal preferences.
because to a person of nature we see beauty, as for me i dont see a line between gender.
Gender refers to characteristics assigned to masculinity or femininity. Feminism is the movement to bring about gender equality.
Jan Wickman has written: 'Transgender politics' -- subject(s): Transvestites, Transsexuals, Gender identity, Transsexualism
No, hormonal gender realignment therapy will not change sexual orientation. We are born with the feelings we have, this cannot be changed.
A person assigned male at birth can be legally considered a woman after completing a legal gender transition process, which typically involves obtaining a court order or updated identification documents that reflect their gender identity as female. This process varies by jurisdiction and may require medical or psychological documentation.
A listing of Minnesota transgender support groups for transsexuals, transvestites, transgendered, crossdressers and gender variant people.