“…Furthermore, for children and adolescents formulating their senses of self and others, it is especially vital to identify and connect with their own gender identity. Because of the societal power relations connected to GISA, persistent discomfort with socially expected gender typicality creates impediments for adolescents' emotional and social development (Hepp et al, 2005;Rieber, 2006;Diamond, 2013), and transgender adolescents have been shown to be bullied and to perpetrate bullying at elevated rates (Heino et al, 2021). As well, gender diverse adolescents' self-concept (e.g., self-esteem), emotional stability (e.g., emotional styles, dissociation, anxiety, and depression), and positive social relations to their peers (e.g., social competence and social desirability), which are crucial for their development, are identified as under pressure and subjected to special health care treatments (Baams, 2018) while the societal power relations leading to exactly these symptoms (Hoshiai et al, 2010) are mostly not addressed (Eisenberg et al, 2017).…”