Talk:Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual community of Brighton and Hove

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Contents

[edit] Why create this article?

I've created this article by copying all of the content from a section in the Brighton article. I've done this to help with clarity of the Brighton article. There's too much information to be included on the Brighton page and enough to deserve its own article. --Seaweed 18:51, 7 June 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Putting the B & T back in LGBT

This article does not discuss bisexual or transsexual people or issues on their own terms. And what about transgender people? Omphaloscope ยป talk 16:49, 21 June 2006 (UTC)

I know of at least two groups for both demographics; Brighton Bothways and Mermaids, respectively. Might I suggest you write something about bisexual and transgendered communities in this article yourself? --Psyk0 11:07, 25 September 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Historical stories

I don't know when the stories appeared, as all this text was copied from the Brighton article. However, the first story about the soldier doesn't seem very relevant to this article. It's not really about the "community". The second is a bit more relevant, but with no sources given. I'm inclined to remove the first one, unless anyone thinks differently? --Seaweed 20:19, 4 August 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Demographics and population

Where are there reliable sources on the LGBT population of Brighton and Hove? It's one of those statistics I've often seen written in papers or websites, but with no actually soruce given. It would also be interesing if there were statistics about the demographic profile of the population. Any ideas?--Seaweed 20:23, 4 August 2006 (UTC)

When the results of 'Count Me In Too' come back, we'll hopefully have some demographic profiles of the LGBT population. In the meantime, the only thing close to an official source I've seen is a booklet by a group called Spectrum who operate down here, but the figure in that booklet was an astonishing 25-30%. Surveying sexuality is always tricky, of course; there are the inherent problems of representativity, being embarrassed or unwilling to reveal it, being unsure of your own sexuality, and then there's the issue of whether sexuality is rigid anyway and how it interacts with gender. --Psyk0 11:05, 25 September 2006 (UTC)

Im a Trustee of Spectrum and yes, there is always an element of guess work involved in pinning down what portion of the local population identify as LGBT. I think its fairly clear though that its higher in Brighton than many other Citys due to migration. Count Me In Too will give a good break down of the internal demographic of the local LGBT community though (age, gender etc). Right now its looking like the first report will be ready by the Spring.