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Queer Campus Bangalore is a support group and safe space for youth of non-conforming sexual orientations and gender identities in Bangalore. It caters to the school, college, and university going crowd of the city.
Sangama is an LGBT rights group based in Bangalore, India.When it began in 1999, [1] Sangama acted as a documentation center but it has since grown to become an LGBT rights and HIV prevention NGO [2] that mobilizes against sexual harassment and discrimination and conducts HIV prevention seminars and programmes.
Such mailing lists, established well before the advent of social networking sites, continue to remain the mainstay for discussion among middle-class, English-speaking Indians, and include LGBT-India, GayBombay, Good As You (Bangalore), Pratibimb (Hyderabad), and Movenpick/Orinam (Chennai). GayBombay.org (established in late 1998) and Orinam.net ...
Akkai Padmashali is an Indian transgender activist, motivational speaker, and singer.For her work in activism, she has received the Rajyotsava Prashasti, the second highest civilian honor of the state of Karnataka, and an honorary doctorate from the Indian Virtual University for Peace and Education.
The first pride march in Bengaluru was held on 29 June 2008. Two other cities in India – Delhi and Kolkata – held simultaneous pride marches on the same day. [1] Around 700 people walked the march from the National College, Basavanagudi to Town Hall and demanded the removal of Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code.
She works now as a transgender-rights activist based in Bangalore. [7] ... Library in Columbia University, ... Negha, a transgender actress from Tamil Nadu. [14 ...
Bangalore University (BU) is a public state university in Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. The university is a part of the Association of Indian Universities (AIU), Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU) and affiliated by University Grants Commission (UGC). Bangalore University is accredited by the NAAC with grade A++ in 2023. [2]
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer rights in India have expanded in the 21st century, though much of India's advancements on LGBT rights have come from the judiciary and not the legislature. LGBTQ people in India continue to face legal and social challenges not experienced by non-LGBTQ people. [4]