
The Disproportionate Impacts of COVID-19 on LGBTQ Households in the U.S.
In July/August 2020, NPR, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (NPR/RWJF/Harvard) conducted a five-part polling series to examine the impact of COVID-19 on households in the United States. The poll included a
The Delta Variant & the Disproportionate Impacts of COVID-19 on LGBTQ Households in the U.S.
In December 2020, MAP released an analysis of a nationally representative survey conducted by NPR, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (NPR/RWJF/ Harvard) showing how LGBTQ people, particularly LGBTQ people of color
Telling a New Southern Story: LGBTQ Resilience, Resistance, and Leadership
Despite being home to the most hostile policy landscape in the country for LGBTQ issues, the South is also home to some of the most innovative, resilient, and effective LGBTQ organizing and activism in the country. The Movement Advancement Project
LGBTQ Policy Spotlight: Mapping LGBTQ Equality in the U.S. South
More LGBTQ people live in the U.S. South than in any other region of the United States. But for the one in three LGBTQ adults who call the South home, the South is the most hostile LGBTQ state policy landscape
Mapping LGBTQ Equality: 2010 to 2020
Where We Call Home: Transgender People in Rural America
Stereotypes and pop culture portrayals often overlook the diversity of rural America, framing rural regions as made up predominantly of white, politically conservative people who are hostile to LGBT people. But millions of LGBT people, including transgender people, live in

