Feature

Australia has finally achieved marriage equality, but there’s a lot more to be done on LGBTI rights

Marriage equality has passed, so what’s next?

Australia said yes

Equality ambassadors and volunteers from the Equality Campaign celebrate as they gather in front of Parliament House in Canberra on December 7, 2017. Source: AFP / AFP PHOTO / SEAN DAVEY (Photo credit should read SEAN DAVEY/AFP/Getty Images)

It took a long time, but on Thursday Australia became the to .

The LGBTI community is euphoric and relieved with this hard-fought victory. But there is from the drawn-out postal survey campaign, which saw attacks on rainbow families and communities. It left many feeling vulnerable and distressed. In some cases, it brought back painful memories of the bullying and abuse they were subjected to in their adolescence.

But once the celebrations from Australia achieving marriage equality have subsided, the fight for LGBTI people to live lives free from discrimination will continue.

A long way to go

The focus recently has, understandably, been on achieving marriage equality. However, it’s important to recognise that this accomplishment does not mean that LGBTI people enjoy all of the same human rights as heterosexual people.

Australian law has not yet caught up with the reality of modern families. Children in LGBTI families may have more than two parents: a lesbian couple may have a child with the assistance of a gay couple, for instance, and all four parents may be actively involved in raising the child.

In contrast to Canada, which allows birth certificates to record up to four parents, Australia allows to be recorded. This means that this pivotal identity document may not accurately reflect a child’s family structure.

Another issue that can now receive greater attention is the ongoing use of conversion therapies to “cure” a person’s same-sex attraction. These harmful practices appear to have , but are actually more prevalent in Australia than ever before.

Conversion therapies have been condemned by the medical profession as harmful and ineffective, and by the UN as . Nevertheless they continue in Australia.

In 2016, the Victorian government established to investigate and ban unregistered health practitioners who claim to be able to convert same-sex-attracted people. However, the Health Complaints Commissioner does not have the power to examine faith-based organisations engaging in such practices, which limits this initiative’s effectiveness.

In the US, however, have enacted legislation to ban conversion therapy – either for minors, or, in the case of , for adults as well.

Additionally, in the state of New Jersey against a Jewish counselling group culminated in a decision that the group had committed consumer fraud when it promised to change a person’s same-sex attraction into opposite-sex attraction, and was held liable to pay damages.

Given the attempts to embed discrimination against LGBTI people in the marriage equality legislation under the guise of , and the into whether Australian law adequately protects religious freedom, now may not be the best time to advocate for the removal of religious exemptions from federal, state and territory anti-discrimination legislation.

As it stands, religious bodies are against a person on the basis of their sexual orientation. The impact of such exemptions were recently illustrated when a teacher at a Baptist school in Western Australia was .

Another issue that has received little attention is the of subjecting intersex infants to surgical or hormonal interventions to “fix” their sex to appear male or female. Advocates are calling for such medical interventions to be banned unless there is freely given and fully informed consent.

Advocacy on the world stage

Australia achieving marriage equality will also help improve our human rights reputation on the international stage – which is in .

At its UN Human Rights Council in 2016, several countries recommended that Australia amend its laws to allow same-sex couples to marry.

Australia should also lend its support to persecuted LGBTI people in other parts of the world. This includes in the Asia-Pacific region, where criminalise homosexuality. As Martin Luther King :

Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.

We should celebrate and enjoy the fact that Australia finally has marriage equality. But it is by no means the end of the road when it comes to the law reform necessary to enable LGBTI people to enjoy lives of dignity and equality.
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Birth certificates that accurately reflect a child’s family, bans on conversion therapies, removal of religious exemptions from anti-discrimination legislation, and prohibitions on surgeries to “normalise” an intersex infant’s genitalia are just some of the issues that need to be fixed before Australia’s LGBTI community can fully enjoy their human rights.


, Professor of Human Rights Law,

This article was originally published on . Read the .


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5 min read
Published 8 December 2017 12:04pm
Updated 8 December 2017 12:08pm
By Paula Gerber
Source: The Conversation


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