LGBTQ rights in Portugal

LGBTQ rights in Portugal

Summary

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) rights in Portugal are among the most advanced in the world, having improved substantially in the 21st century. After a long period of oppression during the Estado Novo, Portuguese society has become increasingly accepting of homosexuality, which was decriminalized in 1982, eight years after the Carnation Revolution. Portugal has wide-ranging anti-discrimination laws and is one of the few countries in the world to contain a ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation in its Constitution. On 5 June 2010, the state became the eighth in the world to recognize same-sex marriage. On 1 March 2011, a gender identity law, said to be one of the most advanced in the world, was passed to simplify the process of sex and name change for transgender people. Same-sex couples have been permitted to adopt since 1 March 2016.

Originally created by Smasongarrison

5/31/2024, 8:44:22 PM

Modified

10/15/2024, 9:26:19 PM

Recent revisions

Xqbot10/15/2024, 9:26:19 PM

Bot: Fixing double redirect from [[LGBT rights in Portugal]] to [[LGBTQ rights in Portugal]]

Smasongarrison5/31/2024, 8:44:48 PM

Add categorization templates and add categories (via [[User:Eejit43/scripts/redirect-helper|redirect-helper]])

Smasongarrison5/31/2024, 8:44:22 PM

Created redirect from [[Intersex rights in Portugal]] to [[LGBT rights in Portugal]] using [[User:Awesome Aasim/redirectcreator|redirect creator]]

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Source: WikipediaView full article