LGBT rights in Louisiana | |
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Louisiana (US) |
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Same-sex sexual activity legal? | Legal since 2003 (Lawrence v. Texas) |
Gender identity/expression | - |
Recognition of relationships |
None |
Restrictions:
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Louisiana Constitutional Amendment 1 (2004) limits marriage to man/woman, places restrictions on non-marriage types of same-sex unions Louisiana Civil Code article 89 prohibits persons of the same sex contracting a marriage. Louisiana Civil Code article 3520 bans the recognition of purported same-sex marriages from other states. |
Adoption | - |
Discrimination protections | None (see below) |
Same-sex sexual activity is legal in Louisiana.
Contents |
Sexual acts between persons of the same sex are legal in Louisiana. They were previously criminalized under the state's sodomy laws, which applied to both homosexuals and heterosexuals. They were rendered unenforceable in 2003 by the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Lawrence vs. Texas.[1]
On September 18, 2004, by a significant margin, the voters of Louisiana approved a state constitutional amendment, Louisiana Constitutional Amendment 1, that banned same-sex marriages and civil unions. The measure did not ban domestic partnerships, however.[2]
Additionally, the Louisiana Civil Code prohibits same-sex couples from contracting to marry, and prohibits the recognition of purported same-sex marriages from other states.[3] Both articles were amended to include the prohibitions in 1999 by the legislature.
Louisiana allows single persons to adopt, and does not explicitly deny adoption or second-parent adoption to same-sex couples.[4]
Louisiana has successfully defended in federal court its refusal to amend the birth certificate of a child born in Louisiana and adopted in New York by a same-sex married couple, who sought to have a new certificate issued with their names as parents as is standard practice for Louisiana-born children adopted by opposite-sex married couples.[5] On July 11, 2011, Lambda Legal, representing the plaintiffs in the case, Adar v. Smith, asked the Supreme Court to review the case.[6]
Discrimination protections concerning employment within the state were allowed to expire in 2008.[7]
Louisiana is one of the few southern states which extended hate crimes protection to cover sexual orientation. It does not cover gender identity.[8][9]
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