7 pieces of equal-rights progress
What Could Go Right? is a free weekly newsletter from?The Progress Network ?written by our executive director,?Emma Varvaloucas . In addition to this newsletter, which collects substantive progress news from around the world, The Progress Network is also home to the anti-apocalypse conversational podcast also called?What Could Go Right? .
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One piece of feedback about this newsletter that we receive more than I would have expected is a request to cover LGBTQ issues less often. That request could be coming from a variety of places. But I do wonder if it's sometimes?because those of us living in the 34 countries where same-sex marriage is legal—to use that as an imperfect proxy for LGBTQ rights generally—forget that we are global outliers.
That’s not to say that life for LGBTQ people in these more progressive countries is idyllic, and of course big variations in rights and attitudes exist across them. But most LGBTQ people in the world are operating in environments closer to, and in many cases much worse than, the one in Greece, where I live, for example.
Here, only 48 percent say homosexuality should be accepted by society. The country’s first openly gay political leader ?was announced last month. He?received society-wide blowback, including from within his own party. Don’t ask me how common it is to use derogatory terms for gay people in everyday conversation.
So that’s what I have in mind when I include LGBTQ issues in the newsletter. In the case of the world vs. equal rights for all, we are far from resolution. ?
Progress, however, is inching forward in a variety of places. In Greece, the center-right government has put same-sex marriage on the table for discussion, although there hasn’t been concrete action yet. And today I’d like to highlight some other notable goings-on for LGBTQ rights, many of which are in Asia.
Same-sex couples in Taiwan can now adopt children. In May, Taiwan updated a law that limited adoption of children by same-sex couples to those biologically related to one partner. Now same-sex couples can adopt under the same rules as heterosexual couples. Same-sex marriage was legalized in 2019.
The Czech Republic may legalize same-sex marriage soon. A bill, supported by both parties, was introduced in May, passed a first round of approval in June, and is now being considered by governmental committees before it will be sent to the Czech Senate.
Nepal’s Supreme court ordered the government to register same-sex marriages. The court’s June order is temporary but still active, while the country awaits legislation from the government to legalize same-sex marriage for good.
Same-sex marriage will become legal in Estonia on January 1, 2024. The legislation was approved in June and will become active in the new year, making Estonia the first Baltic country ?and the 35th globally with marriage equality. Neighboring Latvia recognizes same-sex civil unions but not marriage; Lithuania recognizes neither.?
Hong Kong’s top court gave the government two years to form a framework for the protection of social rights. While the court, in September, did not find that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marriage, it did order the creation of an alternative legal framework to meet “basic social requirements” for them.
Thailand is (re)considering same-sex marriage. The coalition government’s cabinet is reviewing a?bill , which includes provisions for adopting children and inheriting properties, this week. If approved, it will be sent to Thailand’s parliament in December, where it will go through three “readings.” If the bill passes, Thailand will become the first Southeast Asian nation to legalize same-sex marriage. A similar bill passed a first parliamentary reading in early summer, but was set aside during election season. The new one is stronger than the first in that it legalizes same-sex marriage, not just civil partnerships.
Moving from same-sex marriage and family rights to transgender ones, in Japan, courts are reconsidering requirements for legal gender transition.
Japan’s Supreme Court deemed mandatory sterilization for transgender people unconstitutional. Last week, Japan’s 15 justices ruled unanimously to remove surgical sterilization as a requirement for legal gender transition. Transgender people in Japan must still receive a psychiatric evaluation and be single and without children under 18 in order to legally transition. Another requirement, having “a physical form that is endowed with genitalia that closely resemble the physical form of an alternative gender,” has been sent to a lower court for scrutiny.
—Emma Varvaloucas
Quick hits
Below in the links section, wireless EV charging at traffic lights, gene therapy for deafness, Florida man school district bans cellphones, and more.
From The Progress Network
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Department of Ideas?
(A staff recommendation guaranteed to?give your brain some food for thought)
Is social media making us into a group mind? ?|?The Intrinsic Perspective
Why we picked it: If we accept that the formation of a "group mind" is possible, is there a better (potential) example of an active one to observe than social media? And would becoming a part of that group mind "accidentally at a civilization level (such as being forced into it via technological changes),"?as the essay's author, Erik Hoel, writes, necessarily be a bad thing? —Brian Leli
Until next Thursday
What do an 18th-century haberdasher, engraver, hair worker, toy manufacturer, linen draper, cabinet maker, and upholsterer all have in common? You guessed it. British biscuit art .???
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