Jon Davidson
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Jon W. Davidson is Legal Director at Lambda Legal, the oldest and largest national legal organization committed to achieving full recognition of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgender people and people with HIV. He is based in the Western Regional Office.

Davidson has won legal victories ranging from protecting the rights of LGBT students, to helping secure asylum for LGBT people persecuted in their home countries, to stopping HIV-related discrimination. Davidson also has helped reform antigay practices of the Los Angeles Police Department and was the co-drafter of AB 205, California's comprehensive Domestic Partner Rights and Responsibilities Act.

Davidson was lead counsel in lawsuits that succeeded in forcing school boards in both Salt Lake City and Orange, California, to allow LGBT students and their straight supporters to meet together and express themselves on the same terms afforded other students. His representation of Derek Henkle, who suffered severe harassment and abuse from fellow students in the Reno, Nevada, school system, established the precedent that high school students have the constitutional right to be open at school about their sexual orientation and led to the largest pretrial award ever in such a case, as well as sweeping changes in the school district's policies. The friend-of-the-court brief Davidson authored in Rene v. MGM Grand Hotel was instrumental in allowing gay employees to pursue claims for sexual harassment under federal employment discrimination law. He has also been co-counsel in lawsuits seeking the freedom to marry in California and defending California's domestic partner laws.

Davidson joined Lambda Legal in 1995, and previously served as Senior Counsel in its Western Regional Office. Prior to that, Davidson was head of the Lesbian and Gay Rights Project of the ACLU of Southern California, whose staff he joined in 1988. From 1980 to 1988, Davidson was an associate, and then a partner, at Irell & Manella, one of Los Angeles's leading law firms, where he specialized in litigation involving the media and the entertainment industry.

From 1979 to 1980, Davidson served as a law clerk to Hon. William Matthew Byrne, Jr., of the United States District Court for the Central District of California. Davidson has been an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Southern California Law Center, Loyola Law School, Whittier Law School and UCLA School of Law, where he has taught law classes dealing with sexual orientation and HIV-related issues. The Stanford University and Yale Law School graduate also has served as an advisory member of the Subcommittee on Sexual Orientation Fairness of the California State Judicial Council's Committee on Access and Fairness and of the Legal Advisory Committee to Los Angeles's HIV and AIDS Legal Services Alliance. In 2004, Davidson was named one of the 100 most influential lawyers in California by the Los Angeles Daily Journal.

Blog Entries by Jon Davidson

Prop 8: One Landmark Decision Begets Another

Posted February 10, 2012 | 02/10/12 07:49 PM ET

One of the geniuses of our nation's model of jurisprudence is that it is built on a system of precedent. The decision in one lawsuit not only resolves that case but guides, and in some cases controls, future lawsuits that raise similar issues. This principle of "stare decisis" helps ensure...

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Serving in Silence No Longer

Posted September 16, 2011 | 09/16/11 01:03 PM ET

On Tuesday, September 20, we will celebrate the long overdue and unlamented end of Don't Ask, Don't Tell (DADT). For the first time in our nation's history, individuals who are lesbian, gay or bisexual (LGB) will be able to serve openly in the U.S. military, an amazing achievement long in...

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DOMA: What Will Congress Do?

Posted March 2, 2011 | 03/02/11 06:28 PM ET

This has been a dramatic and historic week in our fight for LGBT equality. Just yesterday, the Department of Justice (DOJ) filed papers in our case representing Karen Golinski, a federal judicial employee who has been denied equal medical coverage for her wife.

It was only last week...

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Prop 8 Defender Flees Televised Discussion

Posted October 8, 2010 | 10/08/10 12:57 PM ET

On Wednesday, October 6, I participated in a public panel discussion of the Perry vs. Schwarzenegger case and the constitutionality of denying same-sex couples the freedom to marry. Hosted by the renowned public policy organization The Aspen Institute, the program was to include Chuck Cooper (counsel for the...

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A Slow Death for 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell'

Posted September 30, 2010 | 09/30/10 05:03 PM ET

Late September has traditionally been associated with the harvest, reaping the products of a long, bountiful summer. This September, though, has left many of us who work to secure the equality of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans reaching for the Maalox, unsure of exactly how, when or where our...

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The Anti-Gay Litmus Test?

Posted August 3, 2010 | 08/03/10 03:22 PM ET

In opposing Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan, some members of the United States Senate are reaching back to the anti-gay political playbook of 2004. After months of investigation, testimony, and questions, they have failed to identify any legitimate reason she would be unfit for the high court. So now, a...

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Big Footsteps for Elena Kagan

Posted June 18, 2010 | 06/18/10 04:15 PM ET

The U.S. Senate begins its consideration of the nomination of Solicitor General Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court on June 28th, just two days after the seventh anniversary of the high court's decision in Lawrence v. Texas. The juxtaposition of these events points to critical issues that senators and the...

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