Education
Barnard College.
Barnard College.
In 2002, he founded the Sylvia Rivera Law Project, a non-profit law collective in New York City that provides free legal services to transgender, intersex and gender non-conforming people who are low-income and/or people of color. Bell case. More recently, Spade was involved with the campaign to stop Seattle from building a new jail. The Advocate named Spade one of their "Forty Under 40" in May 2010.
Spade was the 2009-2010 Haywood Burns Chair at City University of New York Law School, the Williams Institute Law Teaching Fellow at University of California, Los Angeles Law School and Harvard Law School, and was selected to give the 2009-2010 James A. Thomas Lecture at Yale Law School.
He received a Jesse Dukeminier Award for the article "Documenting Gender". Spade"s current research interests include the impact of the War on Terror on transgender rights, the bureaucratization of transport identities, models of non-profit governance in social movements, and the limits of enhanced hate crime penalties.
Spade has collaborated extensively in the past, including editing two special issues of Sexuality Research and Social Policy with Paisley Currah and coauthoring a guide to Medical Therapy and Health Maintenance for Transgender Men with Doctor Nick Gorton. Spade has collaborated particularly frequently with sociologist Craig Willse.
Their collaborative projects include I Still Think Marriage is the Wrong Goal, a manifesto and Facebook group.
Willse and Spade were also the co-creators of MAKE, "propaganda for activist agitation", a paper zine (1999–2001) and website (2001–2007). In the past, Spade has written other zines including Piss and Vinegar (2002), telling the story of his transphobic arrest during the 2002 World Economic Forum protests in New York City.
His first book, Normal Life: Administrative Violence, Critical Transport Politics, and the Limits of Law, was released in January 2012 from South End Press and nominated for a 2011 Lambda Literary Award in the category of Transgender Nonfiction. Mimi Nguyen interviewed Spade and Willse about the experience in Maximumrocknroll.
Utne Reader named Spade and Tyrone Boucher on their list of "50 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World" in 2009, for their collaborative project Enough: The Personal Politics of Resisting Capitalism.