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Alberta youth have the right to school library books that reflect their lives, including sexuality

This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.

This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.

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Author: Jamie Anderson, PhD Candidate, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary; Caitlin Campbell, Research Assistant, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary; Nicole Richard, Research Assistant, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, and Tonya D. Callaghan, Professor, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has expressed fondness for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, most recently wagering a a friendly public bet on the NHL hockey playoffs. In 2023, she said she wanted Albertans to enjoy some of the same freedoms available to citizens in certain American states, including Florida.

Her government鈥檚 latest proposal aims to take more than a page from DeSantis鈥檚 playbook, setting its sights on how Florida has targeted school library books, effectively purging and banning many.

Alberta Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides recently announced the province will move ahead to develop provincial standards 鈥渢o ensure the age-appropriateness of materials available to students in school libraries.鈥 This followed a public engagement survey related to what he said were concerns about 鈥渟exually explicit鈥 books in Edmonton and Calgary schools.

The province says the survey results show 鈥渟trong support鈥 for a school library policy, even while the majority of respondents don鈥檛 want the government setting standards for school library books.

This marks the Alberta government鈥檚 latest effort to restrict the rights of 2SLGBTQIA+ children and youth.

New proposed school library standards

Like Florida鈥檚 statute on K-12 instructional materials, Alberta鈥檚 proposal centres on age-appropriateness and increasing parental choice in learning materials.

Despite claiming a need for new standards, Nicolaides has acknowledged there are already mechanisms in place in Alberta鈥檚 school jurisdictions for parents to challenge materials. Many school boards already have policies governing school library materials.

Additionally, librarians are trained professionals who follow established practices around organizing materials that reflect developmental appropriateness.

Florida school book purges

Florida鈥檚 statute, framed by DeSantis as empowering parents to object to obscene material, has targeted 2,700 books. More than 700 were removed from libraries in 2023-24.

Confusion and a climate of fear caused by the bill has led Florida teachers and librarians to self-censor. Florida鈥檚 Department of Education urged districts to 鈥渆rr on the side of caution鈥 to avoid potential felony charges.

Such fear and surveillance lead to unnecessary restrictions on students鈥 rights.

Targeting 2SLGBTQIA+ books

Nicolaides has emphasized that developing the new standards in Alberta is not a question of 鈥渂anning certain books,鈥 and has acknowledged he does not have that authority.

However, as PEN Canada notes, the implications of the proposed policies raise alarm bells, with the government鈥檚 actions 鈥減aving the way to a new era of government-sponsored book banning.鈥 Singling out books has the same effect as a ban, according to the CEO of the St. Albert Public Library.

By labelling four books as inappropriate 鈥 three of which include 2SLGBTQIA+ authors and themes 鈥 Nicolaides suggests these books don鈥檛 belong in K-12 schools. One of the books, the graphic novel Flamer, has won several awards, including the Lambda Literary Award for LGBTQ Young Adult Literature in 2021.

The education minister refuted the idea that singling out the books is anti-queer or anti-trans, and did so in an inflammatory manner, characterizing concern as being about protecting children from seeing porn, child molestation and other sexual content.

Nicolaides also said the proposed policy is focused on sexual content, so themes and depictions of graphic violence are 鈥減robably not鈥 an issue.

Rolling back trans, queer rights

Alberta has already rolled back the rights of trans and non-binary children and youth to use different pronouns, access gender-affirming care and participate in sports.

Queer and trans identities are also absent from all subjects in the K-12 program of studies, including recently updated K-6 curriculum. New sexual health resource guidelines prohibit the use of learning materials that primarily and explicitly address sexual orientation or gender identity unless they have been vetted and approved by Alberta Education (except for use in religion classes).

Survey amplifies moral panic

Through specific communication tactics, the minister鈥檚 public engagement works to exacerbate moral panics about sexuality as a threat to childhood innocence. This influences broader messages about 2SLGBTQIA+ inclusion.

The government-created survey shared illustrations and text excerpts on their own, without context or consideration of their narrative purpose in each book. Although the excerpts flagged by the minister make up between 0.1 to two per cent of the total page count in each book, the books as a whole are labelled 鈥渆xtremely graphic.鈥

In a media appearance, Nicolaides stated the books in question were available to 鈥渆lementary-aged鈥 students. This is misleading because K-9 schools include junior high students.

In a social media post, the minister鈥檚 press secretary said 鈥渢hese problematic books were found in and around books like Goldilocks,鈥 suggesting targeted books are alongside children鈥檚 storybooks. But the image he shared showed Flamer near the graphic novel Goldilocks: Wanted Dead or Alive, aimed at middle-grade readers aged nine to 12 years old.

Survey respondents

The survey reported 77,395 responses by demographics, including parents, teachers, school administrators, librarians and other interested Albertans.

Forty-nine per cent of parents of school-aged children were not at all or not very supportive of the creation of government guidelines, compared to 44 per cent of the same demographic who were somewhat or very supportive (eight per cent were unsure). Across each other demographic, most respondents expressed that they didn鈥檛 support the creation of new government standards. But the ministry plans to move ahead anyway.

Socially conservative lobby

The Investigative Journalism Foundation reports two conservative activist groups have taken credit for giving the Alberta government names of books believed to be inappropriate.

Parental rights groups and far-right activists have long asserted that 2SLGBTQIA+ inclusion in schools 鈥渋ndoctrinates鈥 and sexualizes children.

We鈥檙e concerned the Alberta government may be reinforcing this message to manufacture a greater public consensus in support of wider policies against 2SLGBTQIA+ rights.

Since at least 2023, United Conservative Party (UCP) members have embraced socially conservative 鈥減arental rights鈥 rhetoric and supported motions for purging school libraries and mandating parent approval of changes to kids鈥 names and pronouns.

Traditionalist 鈥榩arental rights鈥

Far-right activist groups like Take Back Alberta have shaped the UCP government鈥檚 policies alongside special interest groups like Action4Canada and Parents for Choice in Education.

A common thread among such groups is parental authority over one鈥檚 own children framed in traditionalist or hetero-normative terms. Significant mobilizing has happened against the inclusion of sexual orientations and gender identities in school curricula, trans-inclusive health care, drag shows, conversion therapy bans and more.

Queer and trans identities are viewed as a social contagion threatening to change anyone exposed to them, and efforts for inclusion are labelled 鈥済ender ideology.鈥

These misconceptions, combined with political and religious biases, frame queerness and transness as 鈥渁dult topics鈥 that will confuse or harm children. However, research confirms ignoring these topics is of far greater concern when children may already experience discrimination about their gender expression by the age of five.

Earlier learning about diverse forms of gender expression and relationships can reduce victimization, and prevent young children from becoming perpetrators of, or bystanders to, anti-2SLGBTQIA+ harassment and violence.

The United Nations recognizes that governments need to resist political pressure 鈥渂ased on child protection arguments to block access to information on [2SLGBTQIA+] issues, or to provide negatively biased information.鈥

Access to self-selected literature is important for all students, and can be a lifeline for 2SLGBTQIA+ students who don鈥檛 see themselves in the curriculum.

If Alberta Education will not prepare students for the world they live in 鈥 where we queer and trans people exist, flourish and are loved 鈥 then students should be able to seek out stories that reflect that world. It鈥檚 a matter of protecting their freedom of expression.

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Jamie Anderson has received funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the University of Calgary.

Tonya D. Callaghan receives funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the Killam Trusts.

Caitlin Campbell and Nicole Richard do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Disclosure information is available on the original site. Read the original article:

https://theconversation.com/alberta-youth-have-the-right-to-school-library-books-that-reflect-their-lives-including-sexuality-258265

Jamie Anderson, PhD Candidate, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary; Caitlin Campbell, Research Assistant, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary; Nicole Richard, Research Assistant, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, and Tonya D. Callaghan, Professor, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, The Conversation