Youth Advocacy Program

The interACT Youth Program was founded in 2010 with the goal of empowering the next generation of intersex Youth leaders ages 13-29, by helping them further develop their advocacy skills. We believe that our personal experience is our greatest asset. The interACT Youth Program fosters a space where members work together–building community and sharing our stories in a way that sends a powerful message: Our Stories Matter, and They Are Worth Telling! 

interACT Youth, staff, alumni and friends at a 2023 gathering

In the Spring of 2023, we implemented a cohort model and onboarded six intersex Youth to join the newly restructured interACT Youth Advocacy Program. The past year’s programming included staff supporting member-led projects, media and advocacy training, Youth representing interACT at public events, such as local Pride festivals, scholarships to attend the 2023 InterConnect Conference, microgrants, and much more! In the Summer of 2024, we brought on a new cohort of intersex Youth to do it again! 

In 2018, we created iSpace, the peer support arm of the interACT Youth Program, designed specifically for intersex youth. In 2023, we officially began collaborating with InterConnect, a long-running peer support group for intersex people, their families, and allies of all ages, to help us run iSpace as it continues to grow. Any young intersex person ages 13-29 who is looking for peer support and connection can join iSpace by filling out this iSpace Membership Questionnaire. We now have a Discord server! In addition to InterConnect and iSpace, Club Intersex is another community-run support group for intersex people. 

If you have any questions about the interACT Youth Program, email Apollo Robert at [email protected]. We hope to renew the cohort model for 2025—please contact us if you’d like to know when applications reopen.

Meet the 2024 Youth Cohort Members

Courtney (they/them)

Courtney is a current PhD Student in Writing, Rhetoric, and Literacy at the Ohio State University. They are passionate about disability theory, creative writing, fiber arts, and bad reality TV—and constantly angry about diagnostic injustice.

Courtney is working on an article about POR Deficiency, a rare version of CAH diagnosed in less than 200 people worldwide.

Emma (she/her)

Emma is an intersex person living with xx/xy chimerism. She is interested in linguistics and biology, taking a personal interest in entomology more specifically. In her spare time she enjoys making art and having fun by messing around with vocaloids.

Emory (they/them)

Emory is an intersex activist from Louisville, Kentucky. Besides sharing their story and raising awareness of intersex people’s history and needs, they are using their background in computer science to study how learned mathematical models (AI) affect the social and medical treatment of intersex people.

Kassie (she/they)

Kassie  is a dancer, choreographer, and budding intersex advocate! They believe in advocacy through the arts; particularly in dance’s capacity for self empowerment, embodiment, and story-telling.

They hope to bring intersex awareness and education to their community through collaborating with local clinics, creating choreography/screendance based on their experiences, and their work as a dance artist/educator.

Our 2023 Youth Cohort Graduates

Liat (she/they)

Liat, a person with long hair in butterfly clips, rainbow glasses who is smiling at the camera.

Liat is a college student, influencer, and early childhood teacher from Stamford, Connecticut. She is a proud Hasidic Jew and is super passionate about increasing LGBTQIA+ visibility and acceptance in Jewish spaces. Having been diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) as a child, and later with Cerebral Palsy and hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, Liat is an advocate for intersex inclusive, weight-neutral, gender-affirming care in medical settings.

In their spare time, Liat loves to crochet, swim, and play video games (Mario is her favorite). She collects jigsaw puzzles and Care Bears and loves anything with cats, bright colors, and/or glitter.

Jay (he/him)

Photo of Jay, who has short hair and glasses in a

Jay is an intersex Disabled man living in Columbus, Ohio with his partner and their two cats. He is a graduate student studying vocational rehabilitation counseling.

He is excited about becoming a stronger advocate for intersex rights by conducting intersex research and writing and speaking publicly about intersex issues. He enjoys playing wheelchair rugby.

Adéyanjú (any/all)

Keely is a light skinned woman with blue eyes and red hair in a red suit. She grins widely into the camera.

Adéyanjú Aiyégbùsì (artist name fàájì:funk!) is a genderfluid, Ìgbómìnà-Yorùbá-Nigerian dyke. Her current research projects draw from the well of radical queer traditions of, including but not limited to, ACT UP, Audre Lorde, the Combahee River Collective, Lesbian Avengers, and Oyèrónkẹ́ Oyěwùmí.

As a cultural worker and advocate, Adéyanjú seeks to advance and uplift existing efforts towards the inevitable collective liberation of intersex, trans and queer people of the African continent and global Afro-diaspora via three mediums:

1.) Revolutionary struggle and study of indigenous precolonial and contemporary history!
2.) Reclaiming bodily autonomy via sports/athletics and body modifications (tattoos, scarification, and tattoos).
3.) Utilizing the arts/culture to expand our collective imagination beyond the rigid bounds of bioessentialist, white supremacist “reality”.

They are currently based in the DC Metropolitan Area and are actively actualizing their dream life as a surfer, skater and musician living and performing between beach cities all across the African continent.

Trace (they/them)

Trace up-close to the camera poses with the shaved side of their head.

Trace identifies as agender and uses they/them pronouns. Trace was diagnosed with a variation of Swyer Syndrome in 2016 at 13 and has been working towards surgery to start estrogen. They were raised as a girl and didn’t know they were Intersex till later in life and from early on had always had gender differences.

They also knew nothing but kindness for everyone and felt and still feel everyone deserves a place in the world no matter age, race, color, sexuality, gender identity etc. They want to start their advocacy journey to not only improve the lives of those who are intersex but others as well using their many gifts.

Elliott (he/him)

Elliott L is a trans and intersex student studying Disability Studies at Georgetown. He is passionate about intersex community building and facilitates an intersex support group.

His other activist work focuses on anticarceral mental health advocacy, radical peer support for psych survivors, and harm reduction. In his free time, Elliott loves ballroom dancing and making art!

Aubrey (he/him)

Aubrey Lay (he/him) is a queer intersex man, activist, and researcher with a BA in Government and Linguistics from William & Mary. His work focuses on LGBTQ and Intersex inclusion in humanitarian crisis response and the intersections of technology and human rights. In his free time, he enjoys reading science fiction, dance, and language learning.