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Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights |
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Laws around the world Recognition of relationships Same-sex marriage LGBT adoption Military service Immigration issues LGBT rights organizations Opposition |
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LGBT portal | ||||||||
Laws affecting lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people vary greatly by country or territory—everything from legal recognition of same-sex marriage or other types of partnerships, to the death penalty as punishment for same-sex sexual activity or identity.
LGBT-related laws include but are not limited to: government recognition of same-sex relationships, LGBT adoption, sexual orientation and military service, immigration equality, anti-discrimination laws, hate crime laws regarding violence against LGBT people, sodomy laws, anti-lesbianism laws, and higher ages of consent for same-sex activity.
In 2011, the United Nations passed its first resolution recognizing LGBT rights, and followed up with a report documenting violations of the rights of LGBT people, including hate crime, criminalization of homosexuality, and discrimination.[1][2]
Contents |
Throughout Hindu and Vedic texts there are many descriptions of saints, demigods, and even the Supreme Lord transcending gender norms and manifesting multiple combinations of sex and gender.[3] There are several instances in ancient Indian epic poetry of same sex depictions and unions by gods and goddesses. There are several stories of depicting love between same sexes especially among kings and queens. Kamasutra, the ancient Indian treatise on love talks about feelings for same sexes. Transsexuals are also venerated e.g. Lord Vishnu as Mohini and Lord Shiva as Ardhanarishwara (which means half woman). [4]
The ancient Law of Moses (the Torah) forbids men lying with men (intercourse) in Leviticus 18 and gives a story of attempted homosexual rape in Genesis in the story of Sodom and Gomorrah, the cities being soon destroyed after that. The death penalty was prescribed.
Middle Assyrian Law Codes dating 1075 BC states: "If a man have intercourse with his brother-in-arms, they shall turn him into a eunuch.
The "conquest mentality" of the ancient Romans shaped Roman homosexual practices.[5] In the Roman Republic, a citizen's political liberty was defined in part by the right to preserve his body from physical compulsion or use by others;[6] for the male citizen to submit his body to the giving of pleasure was considered servile.[7] As long as a man played the penetrative role, it was socially acceptable and considered natural for him to have same-sex relations, without a perceived loss of his masculinity or social standing.[8] The bodies of citizen youths were strictly off-limits, and the Lex Scantinia imposed penalites on those who committed a sex crime (stuprum) against a freeborn male minor.[9] Acceptable same-sex partners were males excluded from legal protections as citizens: slaves, male prostitutes, and the infames, entertainers or others who might be technically free but whose lifestyles set them outside the law.
"Homosexual" and "heterosexual" were thus not categories of Roman sexuality, and no words exist in Latin that would precisely translate these concepts.[10] A male citizen who willingly performed oral sex or received anal sex was disparaged, but there is only limited evidence of legal penalties against these men, who were presumably "homosexual" in the modern sense.[11] In courtroom and political rhetoric, charges of effeminacy and passive sexual behaviors were directed particularly at "democratic" politicians (populares) such as Julius Caesar and Mark Antony.[12]
Roman law addressed the rape of a male citizen as early as the 2nd century BC, when a ruling was issued in a case that may have involved a man of same-sex orientation. It was ruled that even a man who was "disreputable and questionable" had the same right as other citizens not to have his body subjected to forced sex.[13] A law probably dating to the dictatorship of Julius Caesar defined rape as forced sex against "boy, woman, or anyone"; the rapist was subject to execution, a rare penalty in Roman law.[14] A male classified as infamis, such as a prostitute or actor, could not as a matter of law be raped, nor could a slave, who was legally classified as property; the slave's owner, however, could prosecute the rapist for property damage.[15]
In the Roman army of the Republic, sex among fellow soldiers violated the decorum against intercourse with citizens and was subject to harsh penalties, including death,[16] as a violation of military discipline.[17] The Greek historian Polybius (2nd century BC) lists deserters, thieves, perjurers, and "those who in youth have abused their persons" as subject to the fustuarium, clubbing to death.[18] Ancient sources are most concerned with the effects of sexual harassment by officers, but the young soldier who brought an accusation against his superior needed to show that he had not willingly taken the passive role or prostituted himself.[19] Soldiers were free to have relations with their male slaves;[20] the use of a fellow citizen-soldier's body was prohibited, not homosexual behaviors per se.[21] By the late Republic and throughout the Imperial period, there is increasing evidence that men whose lifestyle marked them as "homosexual" in the modern sense served openly.[22]
Although Roman law did not recognize marriage between men, and in general Romans regarded marriage as a heterosexual union with the primary purpose of producing children, in the early Imperial period some male couples were celebrating traditional marriage rites. Juvenal remarks with disapproval that his friends often attended such ceremonies.[23] The emperor Nero had two marriages to men, once as the bride and once as the groom. His consort Sporus appeared in public as Nero's wife wearing the regalia that was customary for the Roman empress.[24]
Apart from measures to protect the prerogatives of citizens, the prosecution of homosexuality as a general crime began in the 3rd century of the Christian era when male prostitution was banned by Philip the Arab. By the end of the 4th century, after the Roman Empire had come under Christian rule, passive homosexuality was punishable by burning.[25] "Death by sword" was the punishment for a "man coupling like a woman" under the Theodosian Code.[26] Under Justinian, all same-sex acts, passive or active, no matter who the partners, were declared contrary to nature and punishable by death.[27]
In feudal Japan, homosexuality was recognized, between equals (bi-do), in terms of pederasty (wakashudo), and in terms of prostitution. The Samurai period was one in which homosexuality was seen as particularly positive. In Japan, the younger partner in a pederastic relationship was expected to make the first move; the opposite was true in ancient Greece. Homosexuality was later briefly criminalized due to Westernization.[28]
Laws prohibiting homosexuality were also passed in China. (China neither adopted an Abrahamic religion nor was colonized, except for Hong Kong and Macau which were colonized with Victorian era social mores and maintain separate legal system from the rest of China.) Homosexuality was not decriminalized there until 1997.[29] Prior to 1997, homosexual in mainland China was found guilty included in a general definition under the vague vocabulary of hooliganism, there are no specifically anti-homosexual laws.[30]
In modern times nine countries have no official heterosexist discrimination. They are Argentina, Belgium, Canada [31][32], Iceland, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, South Africa, and Spain. This full non-discrimination includes the rights of marriage and adoption. Portugal has also marriage rights for same-sex couples but this right does not include same-sex adoption. The Canadian Blood Services’ policy indefinitely defers any man who has sex with another man, even once, since 1977.[33] LGBT people in the US face different laws for certain medical procedures than other groups. For example, gay men have been prohibited from giving blood since 1983,[34][35] and George W. Bush's FDA guidelines barred them from being sperm donors as of 2005, even though all donated sperm is screened for sexually-transmitted diseases.[36]
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Algeria | Illegal (Penalty: Fine - up to 2 years prison)[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Egypt | Not specifically outlawed, other laws may apply[37] | Unknown | |||||
Libya | Illegal (Penalty: up to 5 years prison).[37] | Unknown | |||||
Morocco (incl. Western Sahara) | Illegal (Penalty: up to 3 years) | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
South Sudan | Illegal (Penalty: Up to 10 years.) | Constitutional ban since 2011 | |||||
Sudan | Illegal (Penalty: 5 years up to death penalty.) | ||||||
Tunisia | Illegal (Penalty: Fine - 3 years) | Unknown | Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Benin | Legal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Burkina Faso | Legal[37] | Constitutional ban since 1991 | Unknown | Unknown | |||
Cape Verde | Legal since 2004[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Côte d'Ivoire | Legal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Gambia | Illegal (Penalty: up to 14 years[38]) | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Ghana | Male illegal Female legal[37] |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Guinea | Illegal (Penalty: 6 months to 3 years prison)[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Guinea-Bissau | Legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Liberia | Illegal (Penalty: Fine) | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Mali | Legal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Mauritania | Illegal (Penalty: Death penalty) | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Niger | Legal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Nigeria | Male illegal Female illegal in areas under Sharia Female legal in areas not under Sharia. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Senegal | Illegal (Penalty: 1 month to 5 years prison) | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Sierra Leone | Male illegal Female legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Togo | Illegal | Unknown | Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
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Angola | Not specifically outlawed, other laws may apply (Penalty: Labour camps for habitual offenders).[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Ascension Island | Legal[37] | Unknown | Yes (as part of the Military of the United Kingdom) | Yes (under the United Kingdom Equality Act 2010) | Unknown | ||
Cameroon | Illegal (Penalty: Fine to 5 years prison) | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Central African Republic | Legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Chad | Legal since 1967 | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire) | Legal[37] | Constitutional ban since 2005 | Unknown | Unknown | |||
Equatorial Guinea | Legal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Gabon | Legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Republic of the Congo | Legal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Saint Helena | Legal[37] | Unknown | Yes (as part of the Military of the United Kingdom) | Yes (under the United Kingdom Equality Act 2010) | Unknown | ||
São Tomé and Príncipe | Illegal (Expected to be legalized sometime in 2011)[37] | Unknown | Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
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Burundi | Illegal since 2009[39] | Constitutional ban since 2005 | Unknown | Unknown | |||
Comoros | Illegal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Djibouti | Unclear[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Eritrea | Illegal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Ethiopia | Illegal[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Kenya | Male illegal (Penalty: up to 14 years) Female currently legal, but the Prime Minister has recently called for the arrest of lesbians as well as gay men[40] |
Constitutional ban in Article 45 since 2010[41] | Unknown | Unknown | |||
Madagascar | Legal | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Malawi | Male illegal Female legal[37] |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Mauritius | Male illegal Female legal (national debate over repeal of the law).[37][42] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[43] | Unknown | |||
Mozambique | Legal[44] | Unknown | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[43] | Unknown | |||
Réunion (Overseas department of France) | Legal since 1791 | Pacte civil de solidarité since 1999 |
Single gay persons may adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Unknown | ||
Rwanda | Legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Constitutional ban in Article 26 since 2003 | Unknown | Unknown | |||
Seychelles | Male illegal Female legal (decriminalisation proposed) + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Somalia | Illegal[37] | Unknown | |||||
Uganda | Illegal | Constitutional ban since 2005 | |||||
Tanzania | Illegal (Penalty: up to life imprisonment)[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Zambia | Male illegal (Penalty: up to 14 years) Female legal[37] |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Zimbabwe | Male illegal Female legal[37] |
Unknown | Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Botswana | Illegal (Penalty: Fine - 7 years) | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Lesotho | Male illegal Female legal[37] |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Namibia | Illegal (not enforced)[37][45] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
South Africa | Male legal since 1994, female always legal + UN decl. sign. |
Unregistered partnerships recognised in a series of judgments starting in 1998 | Legal since 2006 | Legal since 2002 (joint and step-parent) | Since 1998 | Constitution bans all discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation | Sex changes are legal and documents can be amended to the recognised gender |
Swaziland | Male illegal Female legal. Pending law includes outlawing lesbian sex conduct.[37] |
Unknown | Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Western Sahara (80% controlled by Morocco) | Illegal (Penalty: up to 3 years prison) | ||||||
Somaliland | Illegal (Penalty: expulsion from country, prison - up to life, in various regions and districts; death penalty) |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex unions | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination Laws (sexual orientation) | Anti-discrimination Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bermuda (Overseas territory of the United Kingdom) | Legal since 1994 (Age of consent discrepancy) | Unknown | |||||
Canada | Legal since 1969 (Age of consent discrepancy[46]) + UN decl. sign. | Legal since 2003, nationwide since 2005 | [47][48] | Since 1992[49] | Bans all anti-gay discrimination, including hate speech | Sex changes legally recognised, but only after sex reassignment surgery; Explicit anti-discrimination protections only in NWT, implicit elsewhere;[50] | |
Mexico | Legal since 1872[37] + UN decl. sign. |
/ PACS in Coahuila since 2007. All states are obliged to recognize but not to perform same-sex marriages.[51] Foreign same-sex marriages are not recognized.[52] |
/ Legal in Mexico City since 2010.[53] All states are obliged to recognize but not to perform same-sex marriages.[51] Foreign same-sex marriages are not recognized.[54] |
/ Joint adoption legal in Mexico City since 2010.[53] Nationwide, single gay persons may adopt.[55] |
/ No explicit ban. However, LGB persons have been reportedly discharged on the grounds of "immorality."[56] | Nationwide since 2003.[57] | / Transgender persons can change their legal gender and name in Mexico City since 2008.[58] |
Saint Pierre et Miquelon (overseas collectivity of France) | Legal since 1791 + UN decl. sign. |
Pacte civil de solidarité since 1999 | Single gay persons may adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||
United States | Legal nationwide since 2003. + UN decl. sign. See Lawrence v. Texas |
/ Varies by state, but not recognized by federal gov't. Civil unions legal in states of Rhode Island, New Jersey, Illinois, Wisconsin, Maine, Maryland, Delaware , Colorado, Hawaii , Washington, Oregon, Nevada, and California. | / Varies by state, but not recognized by federal gov't. Same-sex marriage legal in the states of Iowa, New York, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the U.S. capital, Washington, DC. | / Single gay persons may adopt, laws on couples vary by state | Since 2011 | / No federal protections. Banned in 20 states. Included in the federal hate crimes law since 2009. See Matthew Shepard Act | / No federal protections. Banned in 13 states. Included in the federal hate crimes law since 2009. See Matthew Shepard Act |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex unions | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination Laws (sexual orientation) | Anti- discrimination Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Belize | Male: Illegal since 2003 (Penalty: 10 year prison sentence) Female: Legal; Foreign gay males and females barred from country by immigration law |
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Costa Rica | Legal since 1971 + UN decl. sign. |
N/A | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
El Salvador | Legal + UN decl. sign. | Yes | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Guatemala | Legal+ UN decl. sign. | Unknown | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Honduras | Legal since 1899[37] + UN decl. sign. | Constitutional ban | Constitutional ban | ||||
Nicaragua | Legal since 2008 + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[37] | ||||
Panama | Legal since 2008 + UN decl. sign. |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex unions | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination Laws (sexual orientation) | Anti-discrimination Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anguilla (Overseas territory of the United Kingdom) | Legal since 2000 | ||||||
Antigua and Barbuda | Illegal (Penalty: 15 year prison sentence) | ||||||
Aruba (Autonomous country in the Kingdom of the Netherlands) | Legal | Only unions made in The Netherlands recognised | Only same-sex marriages made in The Netherlands recognised | ||||
Bahamas | Legal since 1991 (Age of consent discrepancy) | ||||||
Barbados | Illegal (Penalty: life sentence) | ||||||
British Virgin Islands | Legal since 2000 | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||||
Cayman Islands | Legal since 2000 | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Cuba | Legal since 1979 + UN decl. sign. |
(but proposed) | |||||
Dominica | Illegal (Penalty: 10 year prison sentence) + UN decl. sign. |
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Dominican Republic | + UN decl. sign. | ||||||
Grenada | Male illegal (Penalty: 10 year prison sentence) Female legal |
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Guadeloupe (Overseas department of France) | Legal since 1791 + UN decl. sign. |
Pacte civil de solidarité since 1999 |
Single gay persons may adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||
Haiti | Legal since 1986 | ||||||
Jamaica | Illegal (Penalty: 10 years hard labor) Female legal. |
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Martinique (Overseas department of France) | Legal since 1791 + UN decl. sign. |
Pacte civil de solidarité since 1999 |
Single gay persons may adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||
Montserrat | Legal since 2000 | ||||||
Puerto Rico (Commonwealth of the United States) | Legal since 2003 | since 2011 | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | |||
Saint Kitts and Nevis | Male illegal (Penalty: 10 years) Female legal |
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Saint Lucia | Male illegal (Penalty: fine and/or 10 year prison sentence) Female legal |
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Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Illegal (Penalty: fine and/or 10 year prison sentence) | ||||||
Trinidad and Tobago | Illegal (Penalty: 25 year prison sentence) | ||||||
Turks and Caicos Islands | Legal since 2000 | ||||||
United States Virgin Islands (Insular area of the United States) | Legal since 1984 | since 2011 | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination Laws (sexual orientation) | Anti- discrimination Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
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Argentina | Legal since 1887[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unregistered cohabitation throughout the country. | Legal since 2010.[59] | Legal since 2010. | Since 2009.[60] | Legal protection on sexual orientation nationwide proposed, still awaiting Senate approval. | Legal protection on gender identity nationwide proposed, still awaiting Senate approval. |
Bolivia | Legal + UN decl. sign. |
(Proposed) | Constitutional ban | Constitutional ban | Unknown | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Bans all discrimination based on gender identity[61] |
Brazil | Legal since 1830[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unregistered cohabitation since 2004 and civil union since 2011. | (pending before the Supreme Federal Court, the decision will be in 2012)[62] | Legal since 2010. | Gays and lesbians to serve openly in military.[63] | / Legal protection on sexual orientation nationwide proposed, still awaiting Senate approval.[64] Legal protection in many states. | Since 2009, the jurisprudence of the Superior Court of Justice has been in favor of Gender-motivated identity change.[65][66] |
Chile | Legal since 1999[37] (Age of consent discrepancy) + UN decl. sign. |
(pending) | (pending) | No laws related to the sexual orientation of members of the armed forces.[67] | (pending)[68][69] | (pending)[68][69] | |
Colombia | Legal since 1981 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2007 | / from 20 July, 2013 under a Court ruling if Congress does not act. | single person, no matter her/his sexual orientation may adopt. First case of step-child adoption, Court ordered.[70] | since 1999. Since 2009: the military special social security system can be used by same sex couples in the army | The Constitution of 1991 penalizes discrimination based on gender and sexual orientation. In 2011 Congress reinforce the Constitutional anti-discrimination principle by law. [71] | [72] Since 1993. The name's gender can be changed easily in the National ID Card, to change the sex field a surgery is required. |
Ecuador | Legal since 1997 + UN decl. sign. |
[73] Civil unions recognized since 2009 | Constitutional ban | Constitutional ban | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Bans all discrimination based on gender identity | |
Falkland Islands (overseas territory of the UK) | Legal | Legal since 2005 | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Unknown | |||
French Guiana | Legal since 1791 + UN decl. sign. |
Pacte civil de solidarité since 1999 | Single gay persons may adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Unknown | ||
Guyana | Male illegal (Penalty: life imprisonment) Female legal. |
Unknown | Added to constitution in 2004, but withdrawn afterwards by the government. | Unknown | |||
Paraguay | Legal since 1880[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Constitutional ban since 1992[74] | Constitutional ban since 1992[74] | Unknown | Unknown | ||
Peru | Legal since 1836-37[37] | since 2009[75] | Bans all anti-gay discrimination. Penalized with 2-4 years in jail. | Possible via Civil Code and Legal Process, but no specific law. | |||
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands | Legal | Legal since 2005 | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Unknown | |||
Suriname | Legal since 1869[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Uruguay | Legal since 1934 + UN decl. sign. |
Civil unions since 2008.[76] | But proposed.[77] | Since 2009.[78] | Since 2009.[79] | Legal protection since 2004.[80] | Legal protection since 2004.[80] Transgender persons can change their legal gender and name since 2009.[81] |
Venezuela | Legal + UN decl. sign. |
Civil union bill passed first reading, becomes law if passes second | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[37] | Under consideration (passed first reading) |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kazakhstan | Legal since 1998[37] | Unknown | |||||
Kyrgyzstan | Legal since 1998[37] | Unknown | |||||
Tajikistan | Legal since 1998[37] | Unknown | |||||
Turkmenistan | Male illegal (Penalty: up to 2 year prison sentence) Female legal[37] |
Unknown | |||||
Uzbekistan | Male illegal (Penalty: up to 3 year prison sentence) Female legal[37] |
Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bahrain | ? Unclear[37] | ||||||
Iraq | Legal since 2003 | ||||||
Israel | Legal since 1963 de facto 1988 de jure[82] + UN decl. sign. |
Unregistered cohabition Legal | Cannot be performed in the country, but foreign same-sex marriages are recognised | [83][84] | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||
Jordan | Legal since 1951 |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Kuwait | Illegal (Penalty: fines, men under 21 face prison sentences up to 10 years, men over 21 face prison sentences up to 7 years) | ||||||
Lebanon | Illegal (Penalty: minimal, unknown); very lax enforcement[37] | ||||||
Oman | Illegal (Penalty: fines, prison sentence up to 3 years; however, only enforced when dealing with "public scandal") | ||||||
Palestinian territories (Gaza) | Male illegal (Penalty: up to 10 year prison sentence) Female legal |
Unknown | |||||
Palestinian territories (West Bank) | Legal since 1951[37] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Qatar | Illegal (Penalty: fines, prison sentence up to 5 years) | ||||||
Saudi Arabia | Illegal (Penalty: death or prison/fines/whipping) | ||||||
Syria | Illegal (Penalty: prison sentence up to 3 years; law de facto suspended) | ||||||
United Arab Emirates | Illegal (Penalty: deportation, fines, prison time or death sentence) | ||||||
Yemen | Illegal (Penalty: flogging or death) |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Afghanistan | Illegal | ||||||
Bangladesh | Illegal | ||||||
Bhutan | Illegal (Penalty: prison sentence up to 1 year; no cases of penalty actually enforced) | ||||||
India | Legal since 2009 Delhi High Court ruling | No explicit recognition, but not outlawed explicitly, same-sex unions reported.[85] | No explicit recognition, but not outlawed explicitly, same-sex marriages reported.[85] | Under consideration | [86] | Under consideration | Transgender people allowed to tick O (Other) in passport and voter identification forms |
Iran | Illegal (Penalty: Death) | Transsexuality in Iran is legal if accompanied by a sex change operation; however, transsexuals still report societal intolerance.[87] | |||||
Maldives | ? Criminal code does not criminalize same-sex sexual relations; sharia law may apply, but no applications have been reported | ||||||
Nepal | Legal since 2007[37] + UN decl. sign. | Under consideration | Under consideration | Supreme Court ruled discrimination laws apply to homosexuals | "Third gender" cards have been issued since September 2007, legally protected class[88] | ||
Pakistan | Illegal (Penalty: 2 years to life sentence) | 'Third gender' officially protected from discrimination by Supreme Court of Pakistan in 2010 | |||||
Sri Lanka | ? Status unclear - British-enacted sodomy law may apply, never implemented |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
People's Republic of China | Legal since 1997 | Unknown | Transsexuals allowed to change legal gender | ||||
Republic of China | Legal | Pending law allows civil unions or same-sex marriage. | Due to military draft | Bans some anti-gay discrimination (in work and education) | Transsexuals allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery | ||
Hong Kong | Legal since 1991 (equal age of consent of 16 for both heterosexual and homosexual sex since 2006) | Unknown (China responsible for defence) | |||||
Japan | Legal since 1880 (was illegal from 1873-1880; before that there were no laws forbidding sodomy) + UN decl. sign. |
Foreign same-sex marriages recognized.[89] | [90] | / No nationwide protections, but some cities bans some anti-gay discriminations[37] | Transsexuals allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery and in case that the transsexual has no child under 20 years old | ||
Macau | Legal since 1996 | Unknown (China responsible for defence) | Unknown | ||||
Mongolia | Legal since 2002 | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
North Korea | (showing public affection is frowned upon even for heterosexual couples) | Unknown although there are heavily obeyed gender roles for both male and female. See Let's trim our hair in accordance with the socialist lifestyle | |||||
South Korea | Legal | Transsexuals allowed to change legal gender |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (Sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brunei | Illegal (Penalty: fine or prison sentence up to 10 years) | ||||||
Burma | Illegal (Penalty: up to life sentence) | ||||||
Cambodia | Legal | Technically prohibited, though there has been at least one recorded case of a legally registered and recognized same-sex marriage | Unknown | Unknown | |||
East Timor | Legal + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Indonesia | Legal[91] except for Muslims in Aceh Province[92] | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Laos | Legal | Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Malaysia | Illegal (Penalty: fines, prison sentence (2-20 years), or whippings) | ||||||
Philippines | Legal.[93][94] except for Muslims in Marawi City | [94] | [94] | [95] | Since 2009 | No national protections, but Quezon City and Albay have anti-discrimination ordinances[96] National bill pending but still not made into law | Unknown |
Singapore | Male illegal (Penalty: up to 2 years prison sentence; no plan to repeal 377A and not enforced since 1999)
Female legal |
Due to conscription, but gays are not allowed to go to command school or serve in sensitive units. | |||||
Thailand | Legal since 1956 | Since 2005 | Unknown | ||||
Vietnam | Legal (no laws against homosexuality have ever existed) | Unknown | Unknown |
See: LGBT rights in the European Union European Union law forbids discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation. All EU states are required to legalise homosexuality and implement anti-discrimination laws.[97][98] |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression | MSMs allowed to donate blood |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Denmark | Legal since 1933 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 1989. First country to legalise same-sex unions. | (under consideration) | Only in registered partnerships since 2010 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[37][99] | |||
Estonia | Legal since 1992 + UN decl. sign. |
Only married couples can adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[99] | |||||
Faroe Islands (constituent country of the Kingdom of Denmark) | Legal since 1933 | (Denmark responsible for defence) | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[99] | |||||
Finland | Legal since 1971 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2002 | (under consideration)[100] | / Step-child adoption only (full joint adoption under consideration) | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[99] | |||
Greenland (constituent country of the Kingdom of Denmark) | Legal since 1933 +UN decl. sign via Denmark. |
Legal since 1996 | / Step-child adoption only | (Denmark responsible for defence) | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||
Iceland | Legal since 1940 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 1996 | Legal since 2010 | Legal since 2006 | N/A | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | Sex changes are legal and documents can be amended to the recognised gender. | |
Ireland | Legal since 1993 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2011 | Supreme Court decision pending | Single gay persons may adopt. Step Child adoption under consideration. | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | Legislation to recognise gender identity pending after High Court ruling in favour. | ||
Isle of Man | Legal since 1991 | Legal since 2011 | UK responsible for defence | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Gender Recognition Act 2009[1] | |||
Latvia | Legal since 1992 + UN decl. sign. |
Constitutional ban since 2006 | Only married couples can adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Lithuania | Legal since 1993 + UN decl. sign. |
Constitutional ban since 1992 | Only married couples can adopt | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | ||||
Norway | Legal since 1972 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 1993 | Legal since 2009 | Legal since 2009 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination.[101][99] | Sex changes are legal and documents can be amended to the recognised gender. | ||
Sweden | Legal since 1944 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 1995 | Legal since 2009 | Legal since 2003 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[37] | Sterilization and divorce necessary for legal gender change. | ||
United Kingdom | Legal since 1967 in England and Wales, 1981 in Scotland and 1982 in Northern Ireland + UN decl. sign. |
Civil partnership since 2005 | Gay marriage due to be introduced by 2015. [102][103] | Legal since 2002 in England and Wales, 2009 in Scotland and unclear in Northern Ireland | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[104][37] | Gender Recognition Act 2004 | From November 2011 in England, Scotland and Wales if they haven't had sex with another man in the previous twelve months.[105] Under consideration in Northern Ireland. |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Belgium | Legal since 1795 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2000 | Legal since 2003 | Legal since 2006 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | ||
France | Legal since 1791 + UN decl. sign. |
Pacte civil de solidarité since 1999 |
Single gay persons may adopt | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[37][99] | |||
Guernsey (incl. Alderney, Herm and Sark) | legal since 1983 | (proposed) | UK responsible for defence | Bans some anti-gay discrimination[106] | [106] | ||
Jersey | legal since 1990 | (passed the States of Jersey, awaiting royal assent) | UK responsible for defence | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Gender Recognition (Jersey) Law 2010[2] | ||
Luxembourg | Legal since 1795 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2004 | (proposed) | Single gay persons may adopt (step-child only proposed) | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||
Monaco | Legal since 1793 | France responsible for defence | |||||
Netherlands | Legal since 1811 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 1998 | Legal since 2001. First country to legalise same-sex marriage. | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression | MSMs allowed to donate blood |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Austria | Legal since 1971 + UN decl. sign. |
Registered partnership since 2010 | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||||
Croatia | Legal since 1977 + UN decl. sign. |
Unregistered cohabitation since 2003 | Single gay persons may adopt | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[107][99] | Act on the elimination of discrimination, The Law on volunteering, Electronic media Law (all including both gender identity and gender expression) | |||
Czech Republic | Legal since 1962 + UN decl. sign. |
Registered partnership since 2006. | Single gay persons may adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Germany | Legal since 1969 (since 1968 in East Germany) + UN decl. sign. |
Registered partnership since 2001 | / Step-child adoption only (full joint adoption proposed) | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Hungary | Legal since 1962 + UN decl. sign. |
Registered partnership since 2009 | Constitutional ban since 2012[108] | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Liechtenstein | Legal since 1989 + UN decl. sign. |
Registered partnership since 2011 | N/A | |||||
Poland | Never punished. Legal until 18th century, criminalized in 19th by laws of Russia, Germany and Austria-Hungary, legal again since 1932 + UN decl. sign. |
(proposed) | Constitution defines marriage as "a union of a man and a woman"[109] | Single gay persons may adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Sex change legal; birth certificate is amended after the reassignment surgery | ||
Slovakia | Legal since 1962 + UN decl. sign. |
Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||||
Slovenia | Legal since 1977 + UN decl. sign. |
Registered partnership since 2006 | (proposed) | (proposed) | Bans all anti-gay discrimination | Sex change is legal: new documents can be issued based on a person's new gender identity.[110] | ||
Switzerland | Geneva, Vaud, Valais and Ticino: legal since 1798. Nationwide since 1942 + UN decl. sign. |
Registered partnership since 2007 | Single gay persons may adopt. | Bans some anti-gay discrimination |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Albania | Legal since 1995 + UN decl. sign. |
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[111] | Forbids discrimination based on gender identity. | ||||
Armenia | Legal since 2002 + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | |||||
Azerbaijan | Legal since 2000 | Unknown | |||||
Belarus | Legal since 1994 | Constitutional ban since 1994. | Banned from military service | ||||
Bosnia and Herzegovina | Legal since 1998 + UN decl. sign. |
Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||||
Bulgaria | Legal since 1968 + UN decl. sign. |
Constitutional ban since 1991. | Single gay persons may adopt. | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | |||
Georgia | Legal since 2000 + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Macedonia | Legal since 1996 + UN decl. sign. |
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[99] | |||||
Moldova | Legal since 1995 | Constitutional ban since 1994. | |||||
Montenegro | Legal since 1977 + UN decl. sign. |
Constitutional ban since 2007. | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[112] | Forbids discrimination based on gender identity. | |||
Romania | Legal since 1996 + UN decl. sign. |
(proposed) | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | ||||
Russia (incl. all constituent regions) | Legal since 1993. Previously legal from 1917 to 1930. | ||||||
Serbia | Legal since 1994 + UN decl. sign. |
Constitution defines marriage as "a union of a man and a woman" | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Act on the elimination of discrimination | |||
Ukraine | Legal since 1991 | Constitution defines marriage as "a union of a man and a woman" |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Andorra | Legal since 1790 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2005 | Legal since 2005 | N/A | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | ||
Cyprus | Legal since 1998 + UN decl. sign. |
(proposed) | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Gibraltar (overseas territory of the UK) | Legal since 1993 | UK responsible for defence | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Greece | Legal since 1951 (Age of consent discrepancy) + UN decl. sign. |
(proposed) | (proposed)[113] | [114] | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | ||
Italy | Legal since 1890 + UN decl. sign. |
Only married couples can adopt | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Sex changes are legal and documents can be amended to the recognised gender.[115] | |||
Malta | Legal since 1973 + UN decl. sign. |
(proposed) | Bans some anti-gay discrimination | Sex changes are legal and documents can be amended to the recognised gender | |||
Portugal | Legal since 1983 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2001 | Legal since 2010 | Single gay persons may adopt | Bans all anti-gay discrimination, according to Constitution[99] | Sex changes are legal and documents can be amended to the recognised gender, enacted in 2011. | |
San Marino | Legal since 2001 + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | |||||
Spain | Legal since 1979 + UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 1998 | Legal since 2005 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | La Ley de Identidad de Género (Gender Identity Law), enacted in 2007. | ||
Turkey | Legal since 1858[37] | Committee formed in March 2010 to draft a discrimination clause including sexual orientation.[116] | |||||
Vatican City | Legal[37] | Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kosovo (only partially recognised, claimed by Serbia) | Legal since 1994 (as part of Serbia), 2008 (as partially recognised sovereign territory) | Bans all anti-gay discrimination[99] | |||||
Turkish Republic Northern Cyprus (recognised only by the Republic of Turkey) | Male illegal (Expected to be decriminalised in 2012), Female legal[37] |
LGBT rights in: | Homosexual acts legal? | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia (including territories of Christmas Island, Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Norfolk Island) | Legal nationwide since 1994.
+ UN decl. sign. |
Unregistered cohabitation since 2009 Civil Union schemes in ACT, Tasmania, Victoria and New South Wales |
banned under the Marriage Act 1961 | / Single gay persons may adopt; joint adoption in ACT, New South Wales and Western Australia. Stepchild adoption in Tasmania. |
since 1992 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination | Covered by all state and territory laws only. |
New Zealand | Legal since 1986.
+ UN decl. sign. |
Legal since 2005. | banned under the Marriage Act 1955 | Single gay persons may adopt. | since 1993 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination | Covered under the "sex discrimination" provision of the Human Rights Act 1993 since 2006. |
LGBT rights in: | Homosexual acts legal? | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
East Timor (terminology "Oceania" varies on border defintions) | Legal since 1975[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown | |||||
Fiji | Legal since 2010[117] + UN decl. sign. |
banned under the Marriage Act 2002 | Unknown | 1997 constitution that banned all anti-gay discrimination has been repealed. | Unknown | ||
New Caledonia (overseas collectivity of France) | Legal | PACS since 2009 | French responsibility | Unknown | |||
Papua New Guinea | Illegal[37] | ||||||
Solomon Islands | Illegal[37] | ||||||
Vanuatu | Legal since 2007[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Unknown |
LGBT rights in: | Homosexual acts legal? | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Guam (unincorporated territory of the United States) | Legal since 1979 | (proposed) | Legal since 2002 | since 2011 | Bans all anti-gay discrimination, also US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | |
Federated States of Micronesia | Legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
since 2011 | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | |||
Kiribati | Male illegal Female legal[37] |
||||||
Marshall Islands | Legal since 2005[37] + UN decl. sign. |
since 2011 | |||||
Nauru | Male illegal Female legal[37](legalisation proposed under a new Criminal Code) + UN decl. sign. |
Australia's responsibility | |||||
Northern Mariana Islands | since 1983 | since 2011 | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | |||
Palau | Male illegal Female legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
LGBT rights in: | Homosexual acts legal? | Recognition of same-sex relationships | Same-sex marriage | Same-sex adoption | Allows gays to serve openly in military? | Anti-discrimination (sexual orientation) | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
American Samoa (unincorporated territory of the United States)[118] | Legal since 1899 | since 2011 | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | The US hate crime laws also apply to all US external territories as well | |||
Easter Island (overseas territory of Chile) | Legal since 1998 | ||||||
Cook Islands (part of the realm of New Zealand) | Male illegal Female legal[37] |
New Zealand's responsibility | |||||
French Polynesia (overseas collectivity of France) | Legal | French responsibility | Unknown |
- |
|||
Hawaii (State of the United States) | since 1972 | reciprocal beneficiary rights since 1997; civil union from 2012 | Constitutional and statute ban since 1998 | from 2012 (under civil union law) | since 2011 | bans discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation | bans discrimination on the basis of gender identity/expression |
Niue (part of the realm of New Zealand) | Legal since 2007[37] | Has no military forces | Unknown | ||||
Pitcairn Islands (overseas territory of the United Kingdom) | Legal since 1967 | Civil partnerships since 2005 | Bans most anti-gay discrimination | ||||
Samoa | Legalisation proposed under a new Criminal Code[3] + UN decl. sign. |
Has no military forces | |||||
Tokelau (part of the realm of New Zealand) | Legal 2007[37] | Has no military forces | |||||
Tonga | Male illegal Female legal[37] |
||||||
Tuvalu | Male illegal Female legal[37] + UN decl. sign. |
Has no military forces | Unknown | ||||
Wallis and Futuna (overseas collectivity of France) | Legal | PACS since 2009 | French responsibility | Unknown |
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