Same-sex marriage: Difference between revisions
Kwamikagami (talk | contribs) Undid revision 1061657896 by 2804:14D:7E27:8310:C5EF:795A:7A76:529C there are lots of countries where ppl are suing. We need a bit more than that for a concise list. |
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* [[Same-sex marriage in the United Kingdom|England and Wales]] (13 March) |
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* [[Same-sex marriage under United States tribal jurisdictions#Keweenaw Bay Indian Community|Keweenaw Bay Indian Community]] (13 December) |
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* [[Same-sex marriage under United States tribal jurisdictions#Stockbridge-Munsee Community Band of Mohican Indians|Stockbridge-Munsee Community Band of Mohican Indians]] (2 February) |
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* {{flagicon|Colombia}} '''[[Same-sex marriage in Colombia|Colombia]]''' (28 April) |
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* [[Same-sex marriage under United States tribal jurisdictions#Tulalip Tribes of Washington|Tulalip Tribes of Washington]] (6 May) |
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Revision as of 12:31, 24 December 2021
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Same-sex marriage, also known as gay marriage, is the marriage of two people of the same sex or gender. There are records of same-sex marriage dating back to the first century. In the modern era, marriage equality for same-sex couples was first legally acknowledged in the Netherlands on 1 April 2001.
As of 2021,[update] same-sex marriage is legally performed and recognized in 29 countries (nationwide or in some jurisdictions) with the most recent being Costa Rica (2020). Switzerland held a referendum on 26 September 2021 that returned a 64% yes-vote, which will allow same-sex couples to marry starting 1 July 2022. On 7 December 2021, Chile's Congress approved a bill to legalize same-sex marriage that will allow same-sex couples to marry starting March 2022. In contrast, 34 countries (as of 2021) have gendered definitions of marriage in their constitutions that prevent same-sex marriage, most enacted in recent decades as a preventative measure. Some other countries have constitutionally mandated Islamic law, which is generally interpreted as prohibiting same-sex marriage. In six of the former and most of the latter, homosexuality itself is criminalized.
The application of marriage law equally to same-sex and opposite-sex couples (called marriage equality) has varied by jurisdiction, and has come about through legislative change to marriage law, court rulings based on constitutional guarantees of equality, recognition that same-sex marriage is allowed by existing marriage law,[1] and by direct popular vote (via referendums and initiatives). The recognition of same-sex marriage is considered to be a human right and a civil right as well as a political, social, and religious issue.[2] The most prominent supporters of same-sex marriage are human rights and civil rights organizations as well as the medical and scientific communities, while the most prominent opponents are religious fundamentalist groups. Polls consistently show continually rising support for the recognition of same-sex marriage in all developed democracies and in some developing democracies.
Scientific studies show that the financial, psychological, and physical well-being of gay people are enhanced by marriage, and that the children of same-sex parents benefit from being raised by married same-sex couples within a marital union that is recognized by law and supported by societal institutions.[3] Social science research indicates that the exclusion of homosexuals from marriage stigmatizes and invites public discrimination against them, with research also repudiating the notion that either civilization or viable social orders depend upon restricting marriage to heterosexuals.[4][5] Same-sex marriage can provide those in committed same-sex relationships with relevant government services and make financial demands on them comparable to that required of those in opposite-sex marriages, and also gives them legal protections such as inheritance and hospital visitation rights.[6] Opposition to same-sex marriage is based on claims such as that homosexuality is unnatural and abnormal, that the recognition of same-sex unions will promote homosexuality in society, and that children are better off when raised by opposite-sex couples.[7] These claims are refuted by scientific studies, which show that homosexuality is a natural and normal variation in human sexuality, and that sexual orientation is not a choice. Many studies have shown that children of same-sex couples fare just as well as the children of opposite-sex couples; some studies have shown benefits to being raised by same-sex couples.[8]
Terminology
Alternative terms
Some proponents of the legal recognition of same-sex marriage—such as Marriage Equality USA (founded in 1998), Freedom to Marry (founded in 2003), and Canadians for Equal Marriage—have long used the terms marriage equality and equal marriage to signal that their goal was for same-sex marriage to be recognized on equal ground with opposite-sex marriage.[9][10][11][12][13][14][15] The AP Stylebook recommends the usage of the phrase marriage for gays and lesbians or the term gay marriage in space-limited headlines. The Associated Press warns that the construct gay marriage can imply that the marriages of same-sex couples are somehow different from the marriages of opposite-sex couples.[16][17]
Use of the term marriage
Anthropologists have struggled to determine a definition of marriage that absorbs commonalities of the social construct across cultures around the world.[18][19] Many proposed definitions have been criticized for failing to recognize the existence of same-sex marriage in some cultures, including in more than 30 African cultures, such as the Kikuyu and Nuer.[19][20][21]
With several countries revising their marriage laws to recognize same-sex couples in the 21st century, all major English dictionaries have revised their definition of the word marriage to either drop gender specifications or supplement them with secondary definitions to include gender-neutral language or explicit recognition of same-sex unions.[22][23] The Oxford English Dictionary has recognized same-sex marriage since 2000.[24]
Opponents of same-sex marriage who want marriage to be restricted to pairings of a man and a woman, such as The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Catholic Church, and the Southern Baptist Convention, use the term traditional marriage to mean opposite-sex marriage.[25][26]
History
Ancient
A reference to same-sex marriage appears in the Sifra, which was written in the 3rd century CE. The Book of Leviticus prohibited homosexual relations, and the Hebrews were warned not to "follow the acts of the land of Egypt or the acts of the land of Canaan" (Lev. 18:22, 20:13). The Sifra clarifies what these ambiguous "acts" were, and that they included same-sex marriage: "A man would marry a man and a woman a woman, a man would marry a woman and her daughter, and a woman would be married to two men."[27]
What is arguably the first historical mention of the performance of same-sex marriages occurred during the early Roman Empire according to controversial[28] historian John Boswell.[29] These were usually reported in a critical or satirical manner.[30]
Child emperor Elagabalus referred to his chariot driver, a blond slave from Caria named Hierocles, as his husband.[31] He also married an athlete named Zoticus in a lavish public ceremony in Rome amidst the rejoicings of the citizens.[32][33][34]
The first Roman emperor to have married a man was Nero, who is reported to have married two other males on different occasions. The first was with one of Nero's own freedmen, Pythagoras, with whom Nero took the role of the bride.[35] Later, as a groom, Nero married Sporus, a young boy, to replace his wife Poppaea Sabina following her death,[36][37] and married him in a very public ceremony with all the solemnities of matrimony, after which Sporus was forced to pretend to be the female concubine that Nero had killed and act as though they were really married.[36] A friend gave the "bride" away as required by law. The marriage was celebrated in both Greece and Rome in extravagant public ceremonies.[38]
Conubium existed only between a civis Romanus and a civis Romana (that is, between a male Roman citizen and a female Roman citizen), so that a marriage between two Roman males (or with a slave) would have no legal standing in Roman law (apart, presumably, from the arbitrary will of the emperor in the two aforementioned cases).[39] Furthermore, according to Susan Treggiari, "matrimonium was then an institution involving a mother, mater. The idea implicit in the word is that a man took a woman in marriage, in matrimonium ducere, so that he might have children by her."[40]
In 342 AD, Christian emperors Constantius II and Constans issued a law in the Theodosian Code (C. Th. 9.7.3) prohibiting same-sex marriage in Rome and ordering execution for those so married.[41] Professor Fontaine of Cornell University Classics Department has pointed out that there is no provision for same-sex marriage in Roman Law, and the text from 342 CE is corrupt, "marries a woman" might be "goes to bed in a dishonorable manner with a man" as a condemnation of homosexual behavior between men.[42] The Boxer Codex, dated 1590, records the normality and acceptance of same-sex marriage in the native cultures of the Philippines prior to colonization.[43]
A 17th century Chinese writer Li Yu attests same-sex marriages in China in his period.[citation needed]
Contemporary
Historians variously trace the beginning of the modern movement in support of same-sex marriage to anywhere from around the 1980s to the 1990s. In United States of America same sex marriage became an official request of gay rights movement after the Second National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights in 1987.[44][45]
In 1989, Denmark became the first country to legally recognize a relationship for same-sex couples, establishing registered partnerships, which gave those in same-sex relationships "most rights of married heterosexuals, but not the right to adopt or obtain joint custody of a child".[46] In 2001, the metropolitan Netherlands became the first country to establish same-sex marriage by law.[47] Since then, same-sex marriage has also been established by law in 28 other countries, including most of the Americas and Western Europe. Yet its spread has been uneven — South Africa is the only country in Africa to take the step; Taiwan is the only one in Asia.[48]
Timeline
Note: Dates are when marriages began to be officially certified. Same-sex marriage is still not performed in some polities that recognize it when performed in other jurisdictions. (e.g. several Mexican states).
Same-sex marriage around the world
Same-sex marriage is legally performed and recognized (nationwide or in some parts) in the following countries: Argentina, Australia,[a] Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Realm of Denmark,[b] Ecuador, Finland, France,[c] Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico,[d] metropolitan Netherlands,[e] metropolitan New Zealand,[f] Norway, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, the United Kingdom,[g] the United States,[h] and Uruguay. In Switzerland and in Chile, same-sex marriage will be performed from 2022.
Same-sex marriage is under consideration by the legislature or the courts in Andorra,[50] Cuba,[51] Curaçao,[52] the Czech Republic,[53] Japan,[54] Liechtenstein,[55] various states in Mexico (e.g. Durango,[56] Tamaulipas, Veracruz and Yucatan), and Peru.[57] Civil unions, as a first step toward marriage, have been considered in a number of countries, including Thailand.[58], Barbados since 2020 and Serbia in 2021.[59]
On 12 March 2015, the European Parliament passed a non-binding resolution encouraging EU institutions and member states to "[reflect] on the recognition of same-sex marriage or same-sex civil union as a political, social and human and civil rights issue".[60][61][62] In 2018, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled that all signatory countries must allow same-sex marriage.
In response to the international spread of same-sex marriage, a number of countries have enacted preventative constitutional bans, with the most recent being Georgia in 2018 and Russia in 2020. In other countries, constitutions have been adopted which have wording specifying that marriage is between a man and a woman, although, especially with the older constitutions, they were not necessarily worded with the intent to ban same-sex marriage.[citation needed]
International court rulings
European Court of Human Rights
In 2010, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled in Schalk and Kopf v Austria, a case involving an Austrian same-sex couple who were denied the right to marry.[63] The court found, by a vote of 4 to 3, that their human rights had not been violated.[64] The court further stated that same-sex unions are not protected under art. 12 of ECHR ("Right to marry"), which exclusively protects the right to marry of opposite-sex couples (without regard if the sex of the partners is the result of birth or of sex change), but they are protected under art. 8 of ECHR ("Right to respect for private and family life") and art. 14 ("Prohibition of discrimination"). Furthermore, under European Convention of Human Rights, states are not obliged to allow same-sex marriage:[65]
The Court acknowledged that a number of Contracting States had extended marriage to same-sex partners, but went on to say that this reflected their own vision of the role of marriage in their societies and did not flow from an interpretation of the fundamental right as laid down by the Contracting States in the Convention in 1950. The Court concluded that it fell within the State’s margin of appreciation as to how to regulate the effects of the change of gender on pre-existing marriages.
— European Court of Human Rights, Schalk and Kopf v Austria[63]
British Judge Sir Nicolas Bratza, then head of the European Court of Human Rights, delivered a speech in 2012 that signaled the court was ready to declare same-sex marriage a "human right", as soon as enough countries fell into line.[66][67][68]
Article 12 of the European Convention on Human Rights states that: "Men and women of marriageable age have the right to marry and to found a family, according to the national laws governing the exercise of this right",[69] not limiting marriage to those in a heterosexual relationship. However, the ECHR stated in Schalk and Kopf v Austria that this provision was intended to limit marriage to heterosexual relationships, as it used the term "men and women" instead of "everyone".[63]
European Union
On 5 June 2018, the European Court of Justice ruled, in a case from Romania, that, under the specific conditions of the couple in question, married same-sex couples have the same residency rights as other married couples in an EU country, even if that country does not permit or recognize same-sex marriage.[70][71] However, the ruling was not implemented in Romania and on 14 September 2021 the European Parliament passed a resolution calling on the European Commission to ensure that the ruling is respected across the EU.[72][73]
Inter-American Court of Human Rights
On 8 January 2018, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) ruled that the American Convention on Human Rights mandates and requires the legal recognition of same-sex marriage. The landmark ruling was fully binding on Costa Rica and set binding precedent in the other signatory countries. The Court recommended that governments issue temporary decrees recognizing same-sex marriage until new legislation is brought in. The ruling applies to Barbados, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Suriname.
The Court said that governments "must recognize and guarantee all the rights that are derived from a family bond between people of the same sex". They also said that it was inadmissible and discriminatory for a separate legal provision to be established (such as civil unions) instead of same-sex marriage. The Court demanded that governments "guarantee access to all existing forms of domestic legal systems, including the right to marriage, in order to ensure the protection of all the rights of families formed by same-sex couples without discrimination". Recognizing the difficulty in passing such laws in countries where there is strong opposition to same-sex marriage, it recommended that governments pass temporary decrees until new legislation is brought in.[74]
The ruling has directly led to the legal recognition of same-sex marriage in Costa Rica and Ecuador. In the wake of the ruling, lawsuits regarding same-sex marriage have also been filed in Bolivia, Honduras,[75] Panama,[76] Paraguay (to recognize marriages performed abroad),[77] and Peru,[78] all of which are under the jurisdiction of the IACHR.
International organizations
The terms of employment of the staff of international organizations (not commercial) in most cases are not governed by the laws of the country where their offices are located. Agreements with the host country safeguard these organizations' impartiality.
Despite their relative independence, few organizations recognize same-sex partnerships without condition. The agencies of the United Nations recognize same-sex marriages if the country of citizenship of the employees in question recognizes the marriage.[79] In some cases, these organizations do offer a limited selection of the benefits normally provided to mixed-sex married couples to de facto partners or domestic partners of their staff, but even individuals who have entered into a mixed-sex civil union in their home country are not guaranteed full recognition of this union in all organizations. However, the World Bank does recognize domestic partners.[80]
Other arrangements
Civil unions
Civil union, civil partnership, domestic partnership, registered partnership, unregistered partnership, and unregistered cohabitation statuses offer varying legal benefits of marriage. As of 23 December 2024, countries that have an alternative form of legal recognition other than marriage on a national level are: Andorra, Chile, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Liechtenstein, San Marino, Slovenia and Switzerland.[82][83] Poland and Slovakia offer more limited rights. On a subnational level, the Mexican state of Veracruz, and the Dutch constituent country of Aruba allow same-sex couples to access civil unions or partnerships, but restrict marriage to couples of the opposite sex. Additionally, various cities and counties in Cambodia and Japan offer same-sex couples varying levels of benefits, which include hospital visitation rights and others.
Additionally, sixteen countries that have legally recognized same-sex marriage have an alternative form of recognition for same-sex couples, usually available to heterosexual couples as well: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, France, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, the United Kingdom and Uruguay.[84][85][86][87]
They are also available in parts of the United States (Arizona[note 1], California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey, Nevada and Oregon) and Canada.[88][89]
Non-sexual same-sex marriage
Kenya
Female same-sex marriage is practiced among the Gikuyu, Nandi, Kamba, Kipsigis, and to a lesser extent neighboring peoples. About 5–10% of women are in such marriages. However, this is not seen as homosexual, but is instead a way for families without sons to keep their inheritance within the family.[90]
Nigeria
Among the Igbo people and probably other peoples in the south of the country, there are circumstances where a marriage between women is considered appropriate, such as when a woman has no child and her husband dies, and she takes a wife to perpetuate her inheritance and family lineage.[91]
Studies
The American Anthropological Association stated on 26 February 2004:
The results of more than a century of anthropological research on households, kinship relationships, and families, across cultures and through time, provide no support whatsoever for the view that either civilization or viable social orders depend upon marriage as an exclusively heterosexual institution. Rather, anthropological research supports the conclusion that a vast array of family types, including families built upon same-sex partnerships, can contribute to stable and humane societies.[5]
Research findings from 1998 to 2015 from the University of Virginia, Michigan State University, Florida State University, the University of Amsterdam, the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Stanford University, the University of California-San Francisco, the University of California-Los Angeles, Tufts University, Boston Medical Center, the Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health, and independent researchers also support the findings of this study.[92][vague]
Adolescence
A study of nationwide data from across the United States from January 1999 to December 2015 revealed that the rate of attempted suicide among school students in grades 9–12 declined by 7% and the rate of attempted suicide among high schoolers of a minority sexual orientation in grades 9–12 declined by 14% in states that established same-sex marriage, resulting in about 134,000 fewer attempting suicide each year in the United States. The researchers took advantage of the gradual manner in which same-sex marriage was established in the United States (expanding from one state in 2004 to all fifty states in 2015) to compare the rate of attempted suicide among youth in each state over the time period studied. Once same-sex marriage was established in a particular state, the reduction in the rate of attempted suicide among youth in that state became permanent. No reduction in the rate of attempted suicide among teenage youth occurred in a particular state until that state recognized same-sex marriage.[93][94] The lead researcher of the study stated that "laws that have the greatest impact on gay adults may make gay kids feel more hopeful for the future".[95][96][97]
Parenting
Professional organizations of psychologists have concluded that children stand to benefit from the well-being that results when their parents' relationship is recognized and supported by society's institutions, e.g. civil marriage. For example, the Canadian Psychological Association (CPA) stated in 2006 that "parents' financial, psychological and physical well-being is enhanced by marriage and that children benefit from being raised by two parents within a legally-recognized union."[98] The CPA has stated that the stress encountered by gay and lesbian parents and their children are more likely the result of the way society treats them than because of any deficiencies in fitness to parent.[98]
The American Academy of Pediatrics concluded in 2006, in an analysis published in the journal Pediatrics:
There is ample evidence to show that children raised by same-gender parents fare as well as those raised by heterosexual parents. More than 25 years of research have documented that there is no relationship between parents' sexual orientation and any measure of a child's emotional, psychosocial, and behavioral adjustment... The rights, benefits, and protections of civil marriage can further strengthen these families.[99]
Health
The American Psychological Association stated in 2004: "Denial of access to marriage to same-sex couples may especially harm people who also experience discrimination based on age, race, ethnicity, disability, gender and gender identity, religion, socioeconomic status and so on." It has also averred that same-sex couples who may only enter into a civil union, as opposed to a marriage, "are denied equal access to all the benefits, rights, and privileges provided by federal law to those of married couples", which has adverse effects on the well-being of same-sex partners.[100]
As of 2006[update], the data of current psychological and other social science studies on same-sex marriage in comparison to mixed-sex marriage indicate that same-sex and mixed-sex relationships do not differ in their essential psychosocial dimensions; that a parent's sexual orientation is unrelated to their ability to provide a healthy and nurturing family environment; and that marriage bestows substantial psychological, social, and health benefits. Same-sex parents and carers and their children are likely to benefit in numerous ways from legal recognition of their families, and providing such recognition through marriage will bestow greater benefit than civil unions or domestic partnerships.[99][101]
In 2009, a pair of economists at Emory University tied the passage of state bans on same-sex marriage in the United States to an increase in the rates of HIV infection.[102][103] The study linked the passage of a same-sex marriage ban in a state to an increase in the annual HIV rate within that state of roughly 4 cases per 100,000 population.[104] In 2010, a Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health study examining the effects of institutional discrimination on the psychiatric health of lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) individuals found an increase in psychiatric disorders, including a more than doubling of anxiety disorders, among the LGB population living in states that instituted bans on same-sex marriage. According to the author, the study highlighted the importance of abolishing institutional forms of discrimination, including those leading to disparities in the mental health and well-being of LGB individuals. Institutional discrimination is characterized by societal-level conditions that limit the opportunities and access to resources by socially disadvantaged groups.[105][106]
Issues
While few societies have recognized same-sex unions as marriages, the historical and anthropological record reveals a large range of attitudes towards same-sex unions ranging from praise, through full acceptance and integration, sympathetic toleration, indifference, prohibition and discrimination, to persecution and physical annihilation.[citation needed] Opponents of same-sex marriages have argued that same-sex marriage, while doing good for the couples that participate in them and the children they are raising,[107] undermines a right of children to be raised by their biological mother and father.[108] Some supporters of same-sex marriages take the view that the government should have no role in regulating personal relationships,[109] while others argue that same-sex marriages would provide social benefits to same-sex couples.[110] The debate regarding same-sex marriages includes debate based upon social viewpoints as well as debate based on majority rules, religious convictions, economic arguments, health-related concerns, and a variety of other issues.[citation needed]
Parenting
Scientific literature indicates that parents' financial, psychological and physical well-being is enhanced by marriage and that children benefit from being raised by two parents within a legally recognized union (either a mixed-sex or same-sex union). As a result, professional scientific associations have argued for same-sex marriage to be legally recognized as it will be beneficial to the children of same-sex parents or carers.[111][98][112][113][114]
Scientific research has been generally consistent in showing that lesbian and gay parents are as fit and capable as heterosexual parents, and their children are as psychologically healthy and well-adjusted as children reared by heterosexual parents.[98][114][115][116] According to scientific literature reviews, there is no evidence to the contrary.[99][117][118][119]
Adoption
All states that allow same-sex marriage also allow the joint adoption of children by people of the same sex[citation needed] with the exceptions of Jalisco, Nayarit and Quintana Roo in Mexico. In addition, Andorra and Israel, which do not recognize same-sex marriage nonetheless permit joint adoption by unmarried same-sex couples. Some additional states allow stepchild adoption by those who are in a same-sex relationship but are unmarried: Croatia, Estonia, Italy (on a case-by-case basis), Slovenia and Switzerland.[120]
As of 2010, more than 16,000 same-sex couples were raising an estimated 22,000 adopted children in the United States,[121] 4% of all adopted children.[122]
Surrogacy and IVF treatment
A gay or bisexual man has the option of surrogacy, the process in which a woman bears a child for another person through artificial insemination or carries another woman's surgically implanted fertilized egg to birth. A lesbian or bisexual woman has the option of artificial insemination.[123][124] Whether these arrangements are legal are subject to controversy in several jurisdictions.[125]
Transgender and intersex people
This article or section possibly contains synthesis of material that does not verifiably mention or relate to the main topic. (May 2017) |
The legal status of same-sex marriage may have implications for the marriages of couples in which one or both parties are transgender, depending on how sex is defined within a jurisdiction. Transgender and intersex individuals may be prohibited from marrying partners of the "opposite" sex or permitted to marry partners of the "same" sex due to legal distinctions.[citation needed] In any legal jurisdiction where marriages are defined without distinction of a requirement of a male and female, these complications do not occur. In addition, some legal jurisdictions recognize a legal and official change of gender, which would allow a transgender male or female to be legally married in accordance with an adopted gender identity.[126]
In the United Kingdom, the Gender Recognition Act 2004 allows a person who has lived in their chosen gender for at least two years to receive a gender recognition certificate officially recognizing their new gender. Because in the United Kingdom marriages were until recently only for mixed-sex couples and civil partnerships are only for same-sex couples, a person had to dissolve their civil partnership before obtaining a gender recognition certificate[citation needed], and the same was formerly true for marriages in England and Wales, and still is in other territories. Such people are then free to enter or re-enter civil partnerships or marriages in accordance with their newly recognized gender identity. In Austria, a similar provision requiring transsexual people to divorce before having their legal sex marker corrected was found to be unconstitutional in 2006.[127] In Quebec, prior to the legalization of same-sex marriage, only unmarried people could apply for legal change of gender. With the advent of same-sex marriage, this restriction was dropped. A similar provision including sterilization also existed in Sweden, but was phased out in 2013.[128] In the United States, transgender and intersex marriages was subject to legal complications.[129] As definitions and enforcement of marriage are defined by the states, these complications vary from state to state,[130] as some of them prohibit legal changes of gender.[131]
Divorce
In the United States of America before the case of Obergefell v. Hodges, couples in same-sex marriages could only obtain a divorce in jurisdictions that recognized same-sex marriages, with some exceptions.[132]
Judicial and legislative
There are differing positions regarding the manner in which same-sex marriage has been introduced into democratic jurisdictions. A "majority rules" position holds that same-sex marriage is valid, or void and illegal, based upon whether it has been accepted by a simple majority of voters or of their elected representatives.[133]
In contrast, a civil rights view holds that the institution can be validly created through the ruling of an impartial judiciary carefully examining the questioning and finding that the right to marry regardless of the gender of the participants is guaranteed under the civil rights laws of the jurisdiction.[134]
Public opinion
5⁄6+ 2⁄3+ 1⁄2+ | 1⁄3+ 1⁄6+ <1⁄6 no polls |
Numerous polls and studies on the issue have been conducted. A trend of increasing support for same-sex marriage has been revealed across many countries of the world, often driven in large part by a generational difference in support. Polling that was conducted in developed democracies in this century shows a majority of people in support of same-sex marriage. Support for same-sex marriage has increased across every age group, political ideology, religion, gender, race and region of various developed countries in the world.[136][137][138][139][140][needs update]
Various detailed polls and studies on same-sex marriage that were conducted in several countries show that support for same-sex marriage significantly increases with higher levels of education and is also significantly stronger among younger generations, with a clear trend of continually increasing support.[141][142][143][144][145][needs update]
- Opinion polls for same-sex marriage by country
Country | Pollster | Year | For[i] | Against[i] | Neither[j] | Margin of error |
Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Albania | IPSOS | 2023 | 26% |
73% (74%) |
1% | [146] | |
Andorra | Institut d'Estudis Andorrans | 2013 | 70% (79%) |
19% (21%) |
11% | [147] | |
Antigua and Barbuda | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 12% | – | – | [148] | |
Argentina | Ipsos | 2024 | 69% (81%) |
16% [9% support some rights] (19%) |
15% not sure | ±5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 67% (72%) |
26% (28%) |
7% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Armenia | Pew Research Center | 2015 | 3% (3%) |
96% (97%) |
1% | ±3% | [151] [152] |
Aruba | 2021 | 46% |
[153] | ||||
Australia | Ipsos | 2024 | 64% (73%) |
25% [13% support some rights] (28%) |
12% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 75% (77%) |
23% | 2% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Austria | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 65% (68%) |
30% (32%) |
5% | [154] | |
Bahamas | AmericasBarometer | 2015 | 11% | – | – | [155] | |
Belarus | Pew Research Center | 2015 | 16% (16%) |
81% (84%) |
3% | ±4% | [151] [152] |
Belgium | Ipsos | 2024 | 69% (78%) |
19% [9% support some rights] (22%) |
12% not sure | ±5% | [149] |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 79% | 19% | 2% not sure | [154] | ||
Belize | AmericasBarometer | 2014 | 8% | – | – | [155] | |
Bolivia | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 35% | 65% | – | ±1.0% | [148] |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | IPSOS | 2023 | 26% (27%) |
71% (73%) |
3% | [146] | |
Brazil | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 51% (62%) |
31% [17% support some rights] (38%) |
18% not sure | ±3.5% [k] | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 52% (57%) |
40% (43%) |
8% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Bulgaria | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 17% (18%) |
75% (82%) |
8% | [154] | |
Cambodia | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 57% (58%) |
42% | 1% | [150] | |
Canada | Ipsos | 2024 | 65% (75%) |
22% [10% support some rights] (25%) |
13% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 79% (84%) |
15% (16%) |
6% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Chile | Cadem | 2024 | 77% (82%) |
22% (18%) |
2% | ±3.6% | [156] |
China | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2021 | 43% (52%) |
39% [20% support some rights] (48%) |
18% not sure | ±3.5% [k] | [157] |
Colombia | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 46% (58%) |
33% [19% support some rights] (42%) |
21% | ±5% [k] | [149] |
Costa Rica | CIEP | 2018 | 35% | 64% | 1% | [158] | |
Croatia | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 42% (45%) |
51% (55%) |
7% | [154] | |
Cuba | Apretaste | 2019 | 63% | 37% | – | [159] | |
Cyprus | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 50% (53%) |
44% (47%) |
6% | [154] | |
Czech Republic | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 60% | 34% | 6% | [154] | |
Denmark | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 93% | 5% | 2% | [154] | |
Dominica | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 10% | 90% | – | ±1.1% | [148] |
Dominican Republic | CDN 37 | 2018 | 45% | 55% | - | [160] | |
Ecuador | AmericasBarometer | 2019 | 23% (31%) |
51% (69%) |
26% | [161] | |
El Salvador | Universidad Francisco Gavidia | 2021 | 82.5% | – | [162] | ||
Estonia | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 41% (45%) |
51% (55%) |
8% | [154] | |
Finland | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 76% (81%) |
18% (19%) |
6% | [154] | |
France | Ipsos | 2024 | 62% (70%) |
26% [16% support some rights] (30%) |
12% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 82% (85%) |
14% (15%) |
4% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 79% (85%) |
14 (%) (15%) |
7% | [154] | ||
Georgia | Women's Initiatives Supporting Group | 2021 | 10% (12%) |
75% (88%) |
15% | [163] | |
Germany | Ipsos | 2024 | 73% (83%) |
18% [10% support some rights] (20%) |
12% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 80% (82%) |
18% | 2% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 84% (87%) |
13%< | 3% | [154] | ||
Greece | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 48% (49%) |
49% (51%) |
3% | ±3.6% | [150] |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 57% (59%) |
40% (41%) |
3% | [154] | ||
Grenada | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 12% | 88% | – | ±1.4%c | [148] |
Guatemala | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 23% | 77% | – | ±1.1% | [148] |
Guyana | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 21% | 79% | – | ±1.3% | [155] |
Haiti | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 5% | 95% | – | ±0.3% | [148] |
Honduras | CID Gallup | 2018 | 17% (18%) |
75% (82%) |
8% | [164] | |
Hong Kong | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 58% (59%) |
40% (41%) |
2% | [150] | |
Hungary | Ipsos | 2024 | 44% (56%) |
35% [18% support some rights] (44%) |
21% not sure | ±5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 31% (33%) |
64% (67%) |
5% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 42% (45%) |
52% (55%) |
6% | [154] | ||
Iceland | Gallup | 2006 | 89% | 11% | – | [165] | |
India | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 53% (55%) |
43% (45%) |
4% | ±3.6% | [150] |
Indonesia | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 5% | 92% (95%) |
3% | ±3.6% | [150] |
Ireland | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 68% (76%) |
21% [8% support some rights] (23%) |
10% | ±5%[k] | [149] |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 86% (91%) |
9% | 5% | [154] | ||
Israel | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 36% (39%) |
56% (61%) |
8% | ±3.6% | [150] |
Italy | Ipsos | 2024 | 58% (66%) |
29% [19% support some rights] (33%) |
12% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 73% (75%) |
25% | 2% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 69% (72%) |
27% (28%) |
4% | [154] | ||
Jamaica | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 16% | 84% | – | ±1.0% | [148] |
Japan | Kyodo News | 2023 | 64% (72%) |
25% (28%) |
11% | [166] | |
Asahi Shimbun | 2023 | 72% (80%) |
18% (20%) |
10% | [167] | ||
Ipsos | 2024 | 42% (54%) |
31% [25% support some rights] (40%) |
22% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] | |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 68% (72%) |
26% (28%) |
6% | ±2.75% | [150] | |
Kazakhstan | Pew Research Center | 2016 | 7% (7%) |
89% (93%) |
4% | [151] [152] | |
Kenya | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 9% | 90% (91%) |
1% | ±3.6% | [150] |
Kosovo | IPSOS | 2023 | 20% (21%) |
77% (79%) |
3% | [146] | |
Latvia | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 36% | 59% | 5% | [154] | |
Liechtenstein | Liechtenstein Institut | 2021 | 72% | 28% | 0% | [168] | |
Lithuania | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 39% | 55% | 6% | [154] | |
Luxembourg | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 84% | 13% | 3% | [154] | |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 17% | 82% (83%) |
1% | [150] | ||
Malta | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 74% | 24% | 2% | [154] | |
Mexico | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 55% | 29% [16% support some rights] | 17% not sure | ±3.5%[k] | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 63% (66%) |
32% (34%) |
5% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Moldova | Europa Libera Moldova | 2022 | 14% | 86% | [169] | ||
Montenegro | IPSOS | 2023 | 36% (37%) |
61% (63%) |
3% | [146] | |
Mozambique (3 cities) | Lambda | 2017 | 28% (32%) |
60% (68%) |
12% | [170] | |
Netherlands | Ipsos | 2024 | 77% | 15% [8% support some rights] | 8% not sure | ±5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 89% (90%) |
10% | 1% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 94% | 5% | 2% | [154] | ||
New Zealand | Ipsos | 2023 | 70% (78%) |
20% [11% support some rights] (22%) |
9% | ±3.5% | [171] |
Nicaragua | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 25% | 75% | – | ±1.0% | [148] |
Nigeria | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 2% | 97% (98%) |
1% | ±3.6% | [150] |
North Macedonia | IPSOS | 2023 | 20% (21%) |
78% (80%) |
2% | [146] | |
Norway | Pew Research Center | 2017 | 72% (79%) |
19% (21%) |
9% | [151] [152] | |
Panama | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 22% | 78% | – | ±1.1% | [148] |
Paraguay | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 26% | 74% | – | ±0.9% | [148] |
Peru | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 36% |
44% [30% support some rights] | 20% | ±5% [k] | [149] |
Philippines | SWS | 2018 | 22% (26%) |
61% (73%) |
16% | [172] | |
Poland | Ipsos | 2024 | 51% (54%) |
43% (46%) |
6% | [173] | |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 41% (43%) |
54% (57%) |
5% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
United Surveys by IBRiS | 2024 | 50% (55%) |
41% (45%) |
9% | [174] | ||
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 50% | 45% | 5% | [154] | ||
Portugal | Ipsos | 2023 | 80% (84%) |
15% [11% support some rights] (16%) |
5% | [171] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 81% | 14% | 5% | [154] | ||
Romania | Ipsos | 2023 | 25% (30%) |
59% [26% support some rights] (70%) |
17% | ±3.5% | [171] |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 25% | 69% | 6% | [154] | ||
Russia | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2021 | 17% (21%) |
64% [12% support some rights] (79%) |
20% not sure | ±4.8% [k] | [157] |
FOM | 2019 | 7% (8%) |
85% (92%) |
8% | ±3.6% | [175] | |
Saint Kitts and Nevis | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 9% | 91% | – | ±1.0% | [148] |
Saint Lucia | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 11% | 89% | – | ±0.9% | [148] |
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | AmericasBarometer | 2017 | 4% | 96% | – | ±0.6% | [148] |
Serbia | IPSOS | 2023 | 24% (25%) |
73% (75%) |
3% | [146] | |
Singapore | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 33% | 46% [21% support some rights] | 21% | ±5% [k] | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 45% (47%) |
51% (53%) |
4% | [150] | ||
Slovakia | Focus | 2024 | 36% (38%) |
60% (62%) |
4% | [176] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 37% | 56% | 7% | [154] | ||
Slovenia | Eurobarometer | 2023 | 62% (64%) |
37% (36%) |
2% | [154] | |
South Africa | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 53% | 32% [14% support some rights] | 13% | ±5% [k] | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 38% (39%) |
59% (61%) |
3% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
South Korea | Ipsos | 2024 | 36% | 37% [16% support some rights] | 27% not sure | ±5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 41% (42%) |
56% (58%) |
3% | [150] | ||
Spain | Ipsos | 2024 | 73% (80%) |
19% [13% support some rights] (21%) |
9% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 87% (90%) |
10% | 3% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 88% (91%) |
9% (10%) |
3% | [154] | ||
Sri Lanka | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 23% (25%) |
69% (75%) |
8% | [150] | |
Suriname | AmericasBarometer | 2014 | 18% | – | – | [155] | |
Sweden | Ipsos | 2024 | 78% (84%) |
15% [8% support some rights] (16%) |
7% not sure | ±5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 92% (94%) |
6% | 2% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Eurobarometer | 2023 | 94% | 5% | 1% | [154] | ||
Switzerland | Ipsos | 2023 | 54% (61%) |
34% [16% support some rights] (39%) |
13% not sure | ±3.5% | [171] |
Taiwan | CNA | 2023 | 63% | 37% | [177] | ||
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 45% (51%) |
43% (49%) |
12% | [150] | ||
Thailand | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 58% | 29% [20% support some rights] | 12% not sure | ±5%[k] | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 60% (65%) |
32% (35%) |
8% | [150] | ||
Trinidad and Tobago | AmericasBarometer | 2014 | 16% | – | – | [155] | |
Turkey | Ipsos (more urban/educated than representative) | 2024 | 18% (26%) |
52% [19% support some rights] (74%) |
30% not sure | ±5% [k] | [149] |
Ukraine | Rating | 2023 | 37% (47%) |
42% (53%) |
22% | ±1.5% | [178] |
United Kingdom | YouGov | 2023 | 77% (84%) |
15% (16%) |
8% | [179] | |
Ipsos | 2024 | 66% (73%) |
24% [11% support some rights] (27%) |
10% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] | |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 74% (77%) |
22% (23%) |
4% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
United States | Ipsos | 2024 | 51% (62%) |
32% [14% support some rights] (39%) |
18% not sure | ±3.5% | [149] |
Pew Research Center | 2023 | 63% (65%) |
34% (35%) |
3% | ±3.6% | [150] | |
Uruguay | LatinoBarómetro | 2023 | 78% (80%) |
20% | 2% | [180] | |
Venezuela | Equilibrium Cende | 2023 | 55% (63%) |
32% (37%) |
13% | [181] | |
Vietnam | Pew Research Center | 2023 | 65% (68%) |
30% (32%) |
5% | [171] |
See also
Notes
- ^ Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in Australia itself and in the non-self-governing possessions of Norfolk Island, Christmas Island and the Cocos Islands, which follow Australian law.
- ^ Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in metropolitan Denmark, the Faroe Islands and Greenland, which together make up the Realm of Denmark.
- ^ Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in metropolitan France and in all French overseas regions and possessions, which follow a single legal code.
- ^ Same-sex marriage is legally recognized throughout Mexico, and it is legally available in most states and in its consulates abroad, though the process is not everywhere as straightforward as it is for opposite-sex marriage. However, it is locally available only by court injunction (amparo) in six states, namely Tabasco, Mexico (Edomex), Yucatan, Veracruz, Durango and Tamaulipas – though as of 2021, the last four are in the process of legislating for same-sex marriage, and courts in all states are legally required to issue an injunction when petitioned. Same-sex marriage is available in some municipalities but not statewide in Guerrero and Zacatecas.
- ^ Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in the Netherlands proper, including the Caribbean municipalities of Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba. Marriages entered into there have minimal recognition in Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten, which together make up the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
- ^ Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in New Zealand proper, but not in its possession of Tokelau, nor in the Cook Islands and Niue, which make up the Realm of New Zealand.
- ^ Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in all parts of the United Kingdom and in its non-Caribbean possessions, but not in its Caribbean possessions, namely Anguilla, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Montserrat and the Turks and Caicos Islands.
- ^ Same-sex marriage is performed and recognized by law in all fifty states of the USA and in the District of Columbia, in all overseas territories except American Samoa, and in all tribal nations that do not have their own marriage laws, as well as in most nations that do. The largest of the dozen or so known exceptions among the federal reservations are Navajo and Gila River, and the largest among the shared-sovereignty Oklahoma Tribal Statistical Areas are the Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw and Citizen Potawatomi. These polities ban same-sex marriage and do not recognize marriages from other jurisdictions, though members may still marry under state law and be accorded all the rights of marriage under state and federal law.
- ^ a b Because some polls do not report 'neither', those that do are listed with simple yes/no percentages in parentheses, so their figures can be compared.
- ^ Comprises: Neutral; Don't know; No answer; Other; Refused.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k [+ more urban/educated than representative]
- ^ Legally available in the municipalities of Bisbee, Clarkdale, Cottonwood, Jerome, Sedona and Tucson.
References
- ^ "Same-sex Oklahoma couple marries legally under tribal law". KOCO. 26 September 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
- ^ Multiple sources:
- "Inter-American Human Rights Court backs same-sex marriage". BBC News. 10 January 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
- "Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. ___ (2015)". Justia. 26 June 2015. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
- Smith, Susan K. (30 July 2009). "Marriage a Civil Right, not Sacred Rite". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 3 October 2012. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
- "Decision in Perry v. Schwarzenegger" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 March 2013. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
- ^ Multiple sources:
- American Psychological Association (2004). "Resolution on Sexual Orientation and Marriage" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 10 November 2010.
- American Sociological Association. "American Sociological Association Member Resolution on Proposed U.S. Constitutional Amendment Regarding Marriage". Archived from the original on 12 August 2007. Retrieved 10 November 2010.
- "Brief of the American Psychological Association, The California Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association, and the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy as amici curiae in support of plaintiff-appellees – Appeal from United States District Court for the Northern District of California Civil Case No. 09-CV-2292 VRW (Honorable Vaughn R. Walker)" (PDF). Retrieved 5 November 2010.
- "Marriage of Same-Sex Couples – 2006 Position Statement" (PDF). Canadian Psychological Association. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 July 2012. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- Pawelski JG, Perrin EC, Foy JM, et al. (July 2006). "The effects of marriage, civil union, and domestic partnership laws on the health and well-being of children". Pediatrics. 118 (1): 349–64. doi:10.1542/peds.2006-1279. PMID 16818585.
- Pawelski, J. G.; Perrin, E. C.; Foy, J. M.; Allen, C. E.; Crawford, J. E.; Del Monte, M.; Kaufman, M.; Klein, J. D.; Smith, K.; Springer, S.; Tanner, J. L.; Vickers, D. L. (2006). "The Effects of Marriage, Civil Union, and Domestic Partnership Laws on the Health and Well-being of Children". Pediatrics. 118 (1): 349–364. doi:10.1542/peds.2006-1279. PMID 16818585. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
- ^ "Brief of Amici Curiae American Anthropological Association et al., supporting plaintiffs-appellees and urging affirmance – Appeal from United States District Court for the Northern District of California Civil Case No. 09-CV-2292 VRW (Honorable Vaughn R. Walker)" (PDF). Retrieved 5 November 2010.
- ^ a b American Anthropological Association (2004). "Statement on Marriage and the Family". Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ^ Handbook of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Administration and Policy — Page 13, Wallace Swan – 2004
- ^ Cline, Austin (16 July 2017). "Common Arguments Against Gay Marriage". Retrieved 26 September 2017.
- ^ Multiple sources:
- Coghlan, Andy (16 June 2008). "Gay brains structured like those of the opposite sex". New Scientist. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
- "Statement on Marriage and the Family". American Anthropological Association. Archived from the original on 28 December 2019. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
- Mary Ann Lamanna; Riedmann, Agnes; Susan D Stewart (2014). Marriages, Families, and Relationships: Making Choices in a Diverse Society. Cengage Learning. p. 82. ISBN 978-1305176898. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
[T]he APA says that sexual orientation is not a choice [...]. (American Psychological Association, 2010).
- Pawelski, J. G.; Perrin, E. C.; Foy, J. M.; Allen, C. E.; Crawford, J. E.; Del Monte, M.; Kaufman, M.; Klein, J. D.; Smith, K.; Springer, S.; Tanner, J. L.; Vickers, D. L. (2006). "The Effects of Marriage, Civil Union, and Domestic Partnership Laws on the Health and Well-being of Children". Pediatrics. 118 (1): 349–364. doi:10.1542/peds.2006-1279. PMID 16818585. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
- American Medical Association, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Psychological Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, National Association of Social Workers, American Psychoanalytic Association, American Academy of Family Physicians; et al. "Brief of [medical organizations] as Amici Curiae in Support of Petitioners" (PDF). supremecourt.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 April 2019. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Davis, Annie (22 October 2017). "Children raised by same-sex parents do as well as their peers, study shows". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
- Bever, Lindsey (7 July 2014). "Children of same-sex couples are happier and healthier than peers, research shows". The Washington Post. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
- "Same-sex Parents and Their Children". American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy. Archived from the original on 16 June 2019. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
Most research studies show that children with two moms or two dads fare just as well as children with heterosexual parents... Where research differences have been found, they have sometimes favored same-sex parents.
- Marcoux, Heather (23 July 2018). "Major long-term study:Kids with lesbian parents grow up to be happy adults". Retrieved 16 June 2019.
The researchers note that the kids in same-sex homes actually reported fewer difficulties than those born to heterosexual couples.
[permanent dead link ] - Pawelski, James G.; Perrin, Ellen C.; Foy, Jane M.; Allen, Carole E.; Crawford, James E.; Del Monte, Mark; Kaufman, Miriam; Klein, Jonathan D.; Smith, Karen; Springer, Sarah; Tanner, J. Lane; Vickers, Dennis L. (July 2006). "The Effects of Marriage, Civil Union, and Domestic Partnership Laws on the Health and Well-being of Children". Pediatrics. 118 (1). American Academy of Pediatrics: 349–64. doi:10.1542/peds.2006-1279. PMID 16818585. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
In fact, growing up with parents who are lesbian or gay may confer some advantages to children.
- ^ "Marriage Equality". Garden State Equality. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
- ^ "Marriage 101". Freedom to Marry. Archived from the original on 16 February 2010. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- ^ Pratt, Patricia (29 May 2012). "Albany area real estate and the Marriage Equality Act". Albany Examiner. Retrieved 25 December 2012.
On July 24, 2011 the Marriage Equality Act became a law in New York State forever changing the state's legal view of what a married couple is.
- ^ "Vote on Illinois marriage equality bill coming in January: sponsors". Chicago Phoenix. 13 December 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
- ^ "Commission endorses marriage and adoption equality". Human Right Commission New Zealand. Archived from the original on 2 December 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
- ^ Mulholland, Helene (27 September 2012). "Ed Miliband calls for gay marriage equality". The Guardian. London, UK. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
- ^ Ring, Trudy (20 December 2012). "Newt Gingrich: Marriage Equality Inevitable, OK". The Advocate. Los Angeles.
He [Newt Gingrich] noted to HuffPo that he not only has a lesbian half-sister, LGBT rights activist Candace Gingrich, but has gay friends who've gotten married in Iowa, where their unions are legal. Public opinion has shifted in favor of marriage equality, he said, and the Republican Party could end up on the wrong side of history if it continues to go against the tide.
- ^ Harper, Robyn (6 June 2012). "When I Get Married, Will It Be a 'Gay Marriage'?". Huffington Post. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- ^ Harper, Robyn (30 June 2012). "My Marriage Won't Be a 'Gay Marriage'". Yahoo!. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- ^ Fedorak, Shirley A. (2008). Anthropology matters!. [Toronto], Ont.: University of Toronto Press. pp. Ch. 11, p. 174. ISBN 978-1442601086.
- ^ a b Gough, Kathleen E. (January–June 1959). "The Nayars and the Definition of Marriage". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 89 (1): 23–34. doi:10.2307/2844434. JSTOR 2844434.
- ^ Murray, Stephen O.; Roscoe, Will (2001). Boy-wives and female husbands : studies of African homosexualities (1st pbk. ed.). New York: St. Martin's. ISBN 978-0312238292.
- ^ Njambi, Wairimu; O'Brien, William (Spring 2001). "Revisiting "Woman-Woman Marriage": Notes on Gikuyu Women". NWSA Journal. 12 (1): 1–23. doi:10.1353/nwsa.2000.0015. S2CID 144520611. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- ^ "Dictionaries take lead in redefining modern marriage". The Washington Times. 24 May 2004. Retrieved 25 September 2012.
- ^ "Webster Makes It Official: Definition of Marriage Has Changed". American Bar Association. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- ^ Redman, Daniel (7 April 2009). "Noah Webster Gives His Blessing: Dictionaries recognize same-sex marriage—who knew?". Slate. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- ^ "The Divine Institution of Marriage". The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 13 August 2008. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
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- Wolfson, Evan (2004). Why Marriage Matters: America, Equality, and Gay People's Right to Marry. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-6459-4.