Category Archives: Allgemein

ECJ rules against Polish workplace LGBTQ discrimination — International Law in Switzerland – Professor Andreas R Ziegler

ECJ rules against Polish workplace LGBTQ discrimination Sexual orientation cannot be a reason to refuse to conclude a contract with a self-employed worker The Directive on equal treatment in employment and occupation, which covers a wide range of occupational activities, establishes a general framework for combatting discrimination based, inter alia, on sexual orientation. Judgment: Click […]

ECJ rules against Polish workplace LGBTQ discrimination — International Law in Switzerland – Professor Andreas R Ziegler

«La recherche a besoin de plus de diversité» — Andreas R. Ziegler

«La recherche a besoin de plus de diversité» L’année dernière, deux prix Nobel ont été décernés ont été attribués à des scientifiques LGBTQ. Mirko Bischoffberger, «biologiste moléculaire, cinéaste et ancien directeur de la communication de l’EPFL», explique pourquoi cela devrait nous intéresser et pourquoi la discrimination entraîne une perte de connaissances. Click to access 08.01.2023-SonntagsBlick-Forschung-braucht-mehr-Diversita%CC%88t_dn0GOMECp.pdf

«La recherche a besoin de plus de diversité» — Andreas R. Ziegler

Barbados scraps ‘buggery’ and ‘serious indecency’ laws in ‘resounding victory’ for LGBTQ+ people

Barbados scraps ‘buggery’ and ‘serious indecency’ laws in ‘resounding victory’ for LGBTQ+ people

New interesting article: Nicholas Leddy, Investigative and Charging Considerations for International Crimes Targeting Individuals on the Basis of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

New interesting article: Nicholas Leddy, Investigative and Charging Considerations for International Crimes Targeting Individuals on the Basis of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

The latest issue of the Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 20, no. 4, September 2022) is out. Contents include:

Nicholas Leddy, Investigative and Charging Considerations for International Crimes Targeting Individuals on the Basis of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

Applications open for the training on the UN human rights system for human rights defenders

Applications open for the training on the UN human rights system for human rights defenders

International Service for Human Rights (ISHR) launched its application process for the new 2023 hybrid edition of the Human Rights Defender Advocacy Programme (HRDAP), which will take place both remotely and in Geneva. The course equips human rights defenders with the knowledge and skills to integrate the UN human rights system into their existing work at the national level in a strategic manner, and provides an opportunity for participants to prepare for and engage in lobbying and advocacy activities at the UN with the aim to effect change back home. (Photo: ISHR)

Read more and apply before 10 January.

USA: Florida court upholds school board’s policy blocking transgender student from using the male bathroom

USA: Florida court upholds school board’s policy blocking transgender student from using the male bathroom

Ruling 7 to 4, a Florida federal appeals court Friday reversed a lower court’s decision that a school board’s policy which prevents transgender students from using the bathroom that corresponds with the gender they identify with is unconstitutional.

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals found that the policy of the school board in St. Johns County, Florida which separates school bathrooms based on biological sex did not violate the Equal Protection Clause and Title IX, contrary to previous rulings by the district court.

Drew Adams, who brought the claim, challenged the school board’s policy on the basis that it discriminated against transgender students by prohibited them from accessing the bathroom which reflects their gender identity. Adams, who identifies as male, was prohibited from using the male bathrooms and was informed by the school that he had to use either the communal female bathrooms or the single-stall, sex-neutral bathrooms.

The court ruled that policy was not discriminatory and based on the lawful recognition of the biological differences between sexes allowing the separation of bathrooms and other living facilities. This is expressly permitted by Title IX.

Writing for the majority, Republican-appointed Barbara Lagoa found that the policy had no “disparate impact” on transgender students and was based on an “important governmental objective” as:

The School Board’s bathroom is clearly related to…its objective of protecting the privacy interests of students to use the bathroom away from the opposite sex and to shield their bodies from the opposite sex…which, like a locker room or shower facility, is one of the spaces in a school where such bodily exposure is most likely to occur.

In a dissenting judgement, Democrat-appointed Jill Prior was critical of the majority’s reasoning, finding that the case “tells the story of a hauntingly familiar harm.” Adams was “forced to endure a stigmatizing and humiliating walk to shame” to use the gender neutral bathroom by a policy that “discriminates against transgender students by depriving them of a benefit that is provided to all cisgender students.” Prior went on to write that whilst the law recognizes a privacy interest of separating bathroom facilities by sex, “where exclusion implies inferiority, as it does here, principles of equality prevail.”

In reaction to the judgement, the Biden administration has urged the court to strike down the school’s policy.

It is expected that the Supreme Court will take up the issue.

The post Florida court upholds school board’s policy blocking transgender student from using the male bathroom appeared first on JURIST – News.

New interesting publication: Same-sex marriage as a human right: How the Strasbourg Court could draw inspiration from the US Supreme Court and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights to … (G Willems – Oñati Socio-Legal Series, 2022)

New interesting publication: Same-sex marriage as a human right: How the Strasbourg Court could draw inspiration from the US Supreme Court and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights to … (G Willems – Oñati Socio-Legal Series, 2022)

More: https://opo.iisj.net/index.php/osls/article/view/1530

Barbados High Court decriminalizes gay sex in landmark ruling

Barbados High Court decriminalizes gay sex in landmark ruling

13 December 2022

The Barbados High Court Monday issued an oral judgement striking down two laws which effectively criminalized gay sex in the island nation. Sections 9 and 12 of the Barbados Sexual Offences Act of 1992 criminalized “buggery” and acts of “serious indency” with penalties of up to life imprisonment and ten years in prison, respectively. According to advocacy organization the Human Dignity Trust, Section 9 applied only to men, but Section 12 criminalized same-sex sexual activity for men and women.

Organizations like Human Dignity Trust, Equals Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean Alliance for Diversity and Equality (ECADE) have “doggedly pursued justice” for LGBT people throughout the region. ECADE celebrated the ruling, saying it “consolidates the rights of all Barbadians to privacy and freedom of expression, and impacts LGBTQ+ people across the eastern Caribbean.”

One litigant in the case told Human Dignity Trust:

Today was a pivotal moment for equality for all Barbadians and one more step in the journey towards more inclusivity for LGBT citizens. This will definitely mean that I and my community can navigate life with just a little more ease and comfort, in the knowledge that Barbados has taken a step to understand us and respect us.

Caribbean nations Antigua and Barbuda and Saint Kitts and Nevis also decriminalized same-sex intimacy this year, but criminal penalties remain in Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.

The High Court is expected to release a written judgement in January 2023.

The post Barbados High Court decriminalizes gay sex in landmark ruling appeared first on JURIST – News.