Quote from: pamelatransuk on March 03, 2018, 09:04:42 AM
I think the only way we may get a vague percentage is if a national body commissioned a survey but even on these, respondents either lie or won't declare.
UK hospitals (either staying or for daily appointment) ask you to fill in Questionnaire which asks the Transgender Question amongst others.
in 2021 there will be a full UK Census.
However I don't see how we could ever truly know statistics on Trans.
Pamela
To get accurate numbers two things need to happen:
1) Cultural, social, and legal acceptance must be close enough to absolute (ie: no negative, including in personal feelings, to being trans or coming out).
2) It loses its cultural cachet in certain circles, so no one is falsely claiming the label by a reasonable standard. (It is expressly important to note that this is
not in anyway a statement on non-binary or non-conforming identities, but rather a simple acknowledgement that the water is muddied a bit in some youth/college age demographics, with individuals who in a void, without social/peer influence would never label themselves as transgender-- and most likely will not continue to do so as they grow older. It is also an acknowledgement of the blurry macro social line between being transgender in any m/f/nb/nc identity, and those who simply believe in a gender-less society that abolishes gender entirely regardless of their identity.)
Of course there are certain statistical confidence levels that can be drawn that aren't precise, but precise enough, as we approach these two things (primarily the first, the latter is probably only the most minute of inflation, though it does tend to be a group that by its nature is vocal, which may have a compounding effect with the broader invisibility of the transgender population for gathering more accurately nuanced data).
Though we do ultimately run afoul of one major issue no matter what... What value does the data hold besides sating curiosity? Statistical information should have some relevance, and I'm not entirely sure that a measurement of the transgender umbrella provides much insight into necessary policy or social changes. We have to really break it down into sub groups, and determine the needs of each of those subgroups, in order to use the data properly, and that is where things get very, very difficult due to the diverse nature of the trans umbrella which is necessarily reliant on self identification. Also inevitably, someone will be left out or offended they are not represented, in their view, properly. For a basic example: To keep data simple and quantifiable, identification may be limited to M/F/NB. For those who are non-conforming(who in a simple data set may wind up being erroneously listed as cis-), bi-gender (but not NB), etc, this is a problem.
And my attempt to forestall working on school work continues.