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LGBT
Related: About this forumRussia’s Anti-Gay Laws: The Politics and Consequences of a Moral Panic
http://thedisorderofthings.com/2013/06/23/russias-anti-gay-laws-the-politics-and-consequences-of-a-moral-panic/#more-7618Interesting (and totally predictable) data.
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The issue of LGBT rights in Russia first properly came to mainstream international attention in March 2012, when the St Petersburg Duma passed a law prohibiting public acts aimed at the propaganda of sodomy, lesbianism, bisexualism and transgenderism amongst minors. The law provoked an international outcry, including calls for tourists to boycott St Petersburg, sister-cities to consider cut off ties with Russias window on Europe, and condemnation from the EU, with the European Parliament passing a resolution noting that it was gravely concerned by developments which restrict freedom of expression and assembly on the basis of misconceptions about homosexuality and transgenderism and calling on Russia and other countries considering the adoption of similar legislation to demonstrate, and ensure respect for, the principle of non-discrimination.
In actual fact, this was not the first anti-gay law to be passed in Russia; Ryazan Oblasts Duma adopted an amendment to local legislation to outlaw the propaganda of homosexualism in May 2006, and Arkhangelsk and Kostroma Oblasts followed suit in 2011. Yet the passing of the St Petersburg law proved to be a catalyst for other administrations to introduce similar laws, with a further six subsequently adopting similar legislation and others considering it (so far only the Moscow Regional Duma has rejected legislation). Most significantly, these laws paved the way for consideration of a federal bill outlawing the propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations to minors, which the Russian Duma passed on June 11 despite continuing international condemnation and the fierce opposition of local LGBTQ activists and their supporters, who frequently endured physical attacks and arrests while protesting against the law.
Despite being a long-time Russia-watcher, the swiftness at which anti-gay laws have spread and at the ferocity of both popular and state homophobia has been striking. This is not, I should add, simply the result of not paying close enough attention. As a queer undergraduate student studying Russian with a compulsory year abroad to plan for, I was extremely conscious of attitudes towards homosexuality and queerness and the stigma and dangers that local LGBTQ people faced (Laurie Essigs Queer in Russia was an essential primer), and was extremely careful not to out myself to anyone who wasnt definitely queer-friendly while living with families first in Krasnoyarsk and then Voronezh in 2001-2002.
At the same time, it appeared until the mid-2000s that slowly but surely Russia was becoming more tolerant. Homosexuality was decriminalised in 1993 without any notable opposition, declassified as a mental illness in 1999, and the percentage of survey respondents advocating for the liquidation of homosexuals fell from 31% in 1989 to 22% in 1994 and all of 5% in 2013 (although inevitably survey results are heavily contingent on the phrasing of questions and, as Alexander Kondakov demonstrates, attitudes to homosexuality are no exception). Attempts to recriminalise homosexual relationships between men failed in 2002, 2003 and 2004.
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Russia’s Anti-Gay Laws: The Politics and Consequences of a Moral Panic (Original Post)
MNBrewer
Aug 2013
OP
pinto
(106,886 posts)1. Good read. Thanks for the snag. Sets the rise of anti-gay Duma legislation in historical framework-
a resurgence of past anti-gay social standards, the role of the post-communist church in public affairs, Russia's relationships with the EU & the UN in regards human rights, etc. Well worth a read.
Thought it was interesting that there was no direct mention of Putin, other than the photo in the article. I think his Rambo "hyper - masculine" publicity stunts play into the larger picture. As does his support of a retake on Russian nationalism.
The issue of LGBT rights in Russia first properly came to mainstream international attention in March 2012, when the St Petersburg Duma passed a law prohibiting public acts aimed at the propaganda of sodomy, lesbianism, bisexualism and transgenderism amongst minors. The law provoked an international outcry, including calls for tourists to boycott St Petersburg, sister-cities to consider cut off ties with Russias window on Europe, and condemnation from the EU, with the European Parliament passing a resolution noting that it was gravely concerned by developments which restrict freedom of expression and assembly on the basis of misconceptions about homosexuality and transgenderism and calling on Russia and other countries considering the adoption of similar legislation to demonstrate, and ensure respect for, the principle of non-discrimination.
In actual fact, this was not the first anti-gay law to be passed in Russia; Ryazan Oblasts Duma adopted an amendment to local legislation to outlaw the propaganda of homosexualism in May 2006, and Arkhangelsk and Kostroma Oblasts followed suit in 2011. Yet the passing of the St Petersburg law proved to be a catalyst for other administrations to introduce similar laws, with a further six subsequently adopting similar legislation and others considering it (so far only the Moscow Regional Duma has rejected legislation). Most significantly, these laws paved the way for consideration of a federal bill outlawing the propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations to minors, which the Russian Duma passed on June 11 despite continuing international condemnation and the fierce opposition of local LGBTQ activists and their supporters, who frequently endured physical attacks and arrests while protesting against the law.
In actual fact, this was not the first anti-gay law to be passed in Russia; Ryazan Oblasts Duma adopted an amendment to local legislation to outlaw the propaganda of homosexualism in May 2006, and Arkhangelsk and Kostroma Oblasts followed suit in 2011. Yet the passing of the St Petersburg law proved to be a catalyst for other administrations to introduce similar laws, with a further six subsequently adopting similar legislation and others considering it (so far only the Moscow Regional Duma has rejected legislation). Most significantly, these laws paved the way for consideration of a federal bill outlawing the propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations to minors, which the Russian Duma passed on June 11 despite continuing international condemnation and the fierce opposition of local LGBTQ activists and their supporters, who frequently endured physical attacks and arrests while protesting against the law.
MNBrewer
(8,462 posts)2. None of this would be happening without at least his tacit assent
Not to mention that it plays into his strongman-shtick.
pinto
(106,886 posts)3. Agree. I'm pretty unfamiliar with the legislative process in Russia, yet it seems
Putin is allied with a coalition of nationalistic, conservative religious and anti-EUer segments in the Duma to effect legislation.