Colombia gay rights
Colombia
LGBTIQ people savor strong protection under the law. In 1999, the Constitutional Court issued verdicts for two intersex-related cases that restricted physicians' and parents' ability to surgically "correct" the genitals of intersex children without their consent and also acknowledged intersex people as a minority group deserving human rights protection. Same-sex marriage has been legal in Colombia since 2011, and in 2016, Colombia’s Constitutional Court made it illegal to refuse marriage registration for same-sex couples. Since 2015, same-sex couples contain been allowed to adopt. The process for legal gender recognition was also simplified in 2015 monitoring a favorable court judgment. Additionally, in March 2022, the Colombian Constitutional Court recognized third-gender classifications for nonbinary individuals. Colombia has legal protections against discrimination and harassment on the grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity; however, these legal protections hold yet to translate into better investigation and sentencing of perpetrators of dislike crimes.
Public opinion and treatment of LGBTIQ people vary greatly across Colombia. The 2022 congressional elec
LGBT in Colombia: a War Within
Abstract
On the surface, Colombia appears to be at the vanguard of the gay rights movement, having extended legal rights to same-sex couples and transgender people in recent years. But for many of the nearly five million Colombians who are LGBT, these rights have been largely meaningless as a result of the deep-rooted prejudice that often results in violence.
Gay, female homosexual and transgender Colombians have been actively persecuted by armed groups involved in Colombia’s decades-long civil war. Members of the LGBT group are four times more likely than the rest of the population to be threatened and abused by both legal and illegal armed forces.
The disproportionate persecution they hold faced was commended in the accord accord that the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the nation’s largest guerrilla group, signed last September. But the inclusion of LGBT rights was one key reason voters rejected the accord in a plebiscite held the following month.
Link to capstone project: http://espitiam.com/lgbt-in-colombia-a-war-within/
Recommended Citation
Espitia, Monica, "LGBT in Colombia: a War Within" (2016). CUNY Despite its sordid history with the drugs cartels, Colombia has undergone a major transformation over the last 20 years. And although Catholicism is still tough here, Colombian population is often considered more tolerant compared to its neighbors because of the diversity within the population. It is however worth noting that the machismo attitude still persists quite strongly in rural areas, particularly near the coast. Legal rights and protections for LGBTQ+ people in Colombia are considered among the most progressive in Latin America. Lgbtq+ marriage was legalized in April 2016 in Colombia with the first queer wedding taking place in Cali on 24 May 2016. In addition, Congress passed a regulation banning discrimination on sexual orientation in 2011, adoption for same-sex couples was legalized in 2012 and the right to change your gender has been in place since 1993. Colombia’s gradual legal rights and protections has won the destination the title of foremost LGBTQ+ emerging destination at the FITUR 2017 travel trade show in Madrid, and is one of the reasons why Colombia was considered the Principal LGBTQ+ Destination in South America in 2018, by the World Travel Awards. The Community Connectedness Generally, LGBT respondents felt a high affiliation with their LGBT community. Respondents agreed with statements saying they feel fancy they are a part of the LGBT community, are pr
Stress, Health, and Well-Being of LGBT People in Colombia