LGBTI+ people are still a vulnerable social group that needs special attention as they are still discriminated against, even if some improvements have been registered throughout the past decades in some countries (Flores, 2019; FRA, 2020; Gato et al., 2021; ILGA World, 2020; Mota & Fernandes, 2021; Roberts, 2019).
Portugal is no exception to this trend. On the one hand, Portugal has one of the best scores in the so-called ILGA-Europe’s Rainbow Map in 2022. On the other hand, the results of the European Social Survey demonstrate that LGBTI+ people still face significant societal discrimination in this country. The results from the Round 9 [2018] of this survey reveal that there is still a considerable percentage of the surveyed population who think gays and lesbians should not live as they wish (16.5%; points 3, 4 and 5 in a 1-5 scale) or who would feel ashamed if a close family member was gay or lesbian (23.6%; same scale). These latter results are much higher than in other western European countries, such as Norway (6.7%), the Netherlands (6.8%), Denmark (8.0%), Sweden (12.8%) or even Spain (13.3%). Furthermore, in a study developed by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA, 2020), 20% of the surveyed Portuguese LGBTI+ people claimed to have felt discriminated against at work due to being LGBTI.
If these general results are already a matter of concern, it is not difficult to anticipate the situation may be even more problematic in more peripheral territories, not only because there could be more conservative communities in such territories but also because most services targeting LGBTI+ people are placed in bigger cities (Hartal, 2015; Binnie, 2016; Eleftheriadis, 2017; Stone, 2018) – for instance, the only community centre for LGBTI+ people in Portugal is located in Lisbon. However, it is not possible to know this for sure as all the mentioned surveys do not ask respondents about their place of residence.
Taking this situation into consideration, a project named “Centre Region out of Closet” (a project with ILGA-Portugal) is currently analysing the needs and challenges related to the integration of LGBTI+ people in the Centre Region of Portugal (NUTS II, with around 2.2 million people). To do so, we launched two online surveys: one on LGBTI+ people – with a selection of questions from the survey launched by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (2020), which enables us to compare the national and regional results; and another on public and social services (e.g., NGOs, health care centres, schools, municipalities, and inter-municipal communities), which were launched in articulation with Social Action Local Councils (CLAS). The first survey aims to understand the struggles and needs that LGBTI+ people experience and the second one to assess to what extent the mentioned services have programs targeting the integration of LGBTI+ people and what are their main challenges in doing so (e.g., lack of interest from the general community, lack of funds or human resources, or lack of training).
This presentation will explore the main preliminary results of both surveys.
References
Binnie, Jon (2016). “Critical queer regionality and LGBTQ politics in Europe”. Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography, 23(11): 1631-1642. https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2015.1136812
Eleftheriadis, Konstantinos (2017). “Cosmopolitanism, Nationalism, and Sexual Politics in the European Periphery: a Multiscalar Analysis of Gay Prides in Thessaloniki, Greece”. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society 30: 385–398. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10767-016-9243-5
Flores, Andrew R. (2019). Social acceptance of LGBT people in 174 countries, 1981 to 2017. Los Angeles: The Williams Institute. https://escholarship.org/content/qt5qs218xd/qt5qs218xd.pdf
FRA - European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (2020). A long way to go for LGBTI equality. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. https://fra.europa.eu/en/publication/2020/eu-lgbti-survey-results#publication-tab-1
Gato, Jorge, Jaime Barrientos, Fiona Tasker, Marina Miscioscia, Elder Cerqueira-Santos, , Anna Malmquist, Daniel Seabra, Daniela Leal, Marie Houghton, Mikael Poli, Alessio Gubello, Mozer de Miranda Ramos, Mónica Guzmán, Alfonso Urzúa, Francisco Ulloa & Matilda Wurm (2021). “Psychosocial Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic and Mental Health among LGBTQ+ Young Adults: A Cross-Cultural Comparison across Six Nations”. Journal of Homosexuality, 68(4): 612-630. https://doi.org/10.1080/00918369.2020.1868186
Hartal, Gilly (2015). “Becoming Periphery - Israeli LGBT “Peripheralization” “. ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 14(2), 571-597. Retrieved from https://www.acme-journal.org/index.php/acme/article/view/1101
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Mota, Luís F. & Bruna Fernandes (2021) “Debating the law of self-determination of gender identity in Portugal: composition and dynamics of advocacy coalitions of political and civil society actors in the discussion of morality issues”. Social Politics, advance papers: 1-21. https://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxab015
Roberts, Louisa L. (2019). “Changing worldwide attitudes toward homosexuality: The influence of global and region-specific cultures, 1981–2012”. Social Science Research, 80: 114-131. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2018.12.003
Stone, Amy L. (2018). “The Geography of Research on LGBTQ Life: Why sociologists should study the South, rural queers, and ordinary cities”. Sociology Compass, 12(11). https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12638