Why should we allow gay marriage in australia
Same-sex marriage: The street to social justice?
May 2014
An earlier version of this sheet was presented at the Sydney Social Justice Network’s inaugural PhD conference in November 2013.
Louise Richardson-Self, The University of Sydney
The goal of marriage equality should be the social and legal non-discrimination of lesbian, lgbtq+, bisexual and gender diverse (LGBT) people. But how likely is same-sex marriage to lead to social justice? This article argues that, while same-sex marriage is justified, social justice is best served when the normative importance of marriage is undercut.
A familiar argument in favour of same-sex marriage is that, without reform, LGBT people are confined to the status of second class citizens. Take this expression from Australian Marriage Equality (2013; emphasis added), one of Australia’s leading homosexual marriage advocacy organisations:
Consider all the other groups in population, along with people of colour and same-sex attracted people, who at one time or another have been denied the right to marry the significant other of their choice: women, people from differing faiths, people with disabilities … The gradual acceptance that members of these
Gay marriage good for family and economy
I have a simple message to Australian politicians currently considering homosexual marriage: the overseas life has been an entirely positive one.
Marriage equality is a controversial issue with opponents of reform predicting dire consequences. But when social scientists like myself look closely at those societies where reform has occurred, what we watch is very different.
First of all, the impact on same-sex couples and their families has been positive and profound.
A range of studies have shown that marriage leads to improved mental and physical health, findings cited the American Psychological Association when it endorsed marriage equality in August last year.
Allowing lgbtq+ couples to marry has also produced similar positive effects in Massachusetts and the Netherlands, according to studies conducted by my colleagues and me at the Williams Institute at UCLA.
We found that over 70 per cent of married same-sex couples felt marriage had increased the level of commitment in their relationship.
The same percentage of same-sex partners felt more accepted and legitimised within their broader families and communities, with a common
Australia is progressing towards LGBTIQA+ equality. In 2017 we voted for it. But the backlash to that progress poses a stern threat. The question before us is how carry out we continue to form progress despite the backlash?
From Bigots Island to the Rainbow Isle
Thirty years ago, my article for the first edition of the Human Rights Defender explained a ground-breaking appeal I was involved in to the UN Human Rights Committee against Tasmania’s then laws criminalising gay connection with up to 21 years in gaol.
That appeal was ultimately successful. It gave us a platform to seek federal legislation and a High Court ruling against the offending state law, it gave the Commonwealth Parliament a mandate to prohibit anti-LGBTIQA+ discrimination, and it place a precedent for decriminalisation in other countries from Belize to India.
The Tasmanian UN decision has played a critical role in LGBTIQA+ emancipation. But it would be wrong to attribute change in Tasmania and elsewhere solely to that decision. Its ramifications have been greatest where there was already a community-based campaign in place.
In Tasmania this campaign emotionally attached everyday LGBTIQA+ people reaching out to potential allies
Marriage equality
Источник: https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/marriage-equalityDecriminalisation of homosexuality
From the 1960s the socially progressive South Australian Labor government wanted to repeal laws criminalising homosexuality.
However, it was not until the May 1972 murder in Adelaide of Dr George Duncan, a law lecturer and gay man, that premier, Don Dunstan, assessed that the community mood was receptive to reform.
Dr Duncan’s murder led to revelations of how commonplace abuse and harassment against homosexual people was.
South Australia’s Criminal Statute (Sexual Offences) Operate, was enacted on 2 October 1975. It was a landmark in LGBTQIA+ rights in Australia because it fully decriminalised homosexual acts.
Equivalent law reform was passed by the Australian Capital Area in 1976, Victoria in 1980, the Northern Territory in 1983, New South Wales in 1984, Western Australia in 1989, Queensland in 1990 and Tasmania in 1997.
I recently published a petty book entitled A Secret Life. This provides a number of biographical sketches, although it stops brief of deserving the title of an autobiography.
The fourth chapter of the manual is named for my partner of 43 years, Johan van Vloten. It tells how we met and how we contain stayed together ever since. It has never been formalised by marriage or in any other way. But it is rock solid and a fantastic blessing in my being and in the lives of my family. Anyone who would deny another human being who wants a loving, supportive, intimate companion on the journey through life is not a kind person.
In recent years, Johan and I have discussed whether, were marriage available to us, we would take the plunge. Because our association has been tested in the furnace of being, including on a several nasty occasions, we own not hitherto felt the need for a formal ceremony to tell the world about our partnership. To that extent, I can approach the issue of marriage equality with a degree of dispassion. Both of us are strongly of the view that the legal status of marriage should be available to those men and women who qualify for it. As a legal status, established by federal le