LGBT-related laws by country or territory (Pacifica)
Rights affecting lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people vary greatly by country or jurisdiction—encompassing everything from the legal recognition of same-sex marriage to the death penalty for homosexuality.
LGBT rights in: | Same-sex sexual activity | Recognition of same-sex unions | Same-sex marriage | Adoption by same-sex couples | LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military | Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation | Laws concerning gender identity/expression |
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No legal distinction between unions and marriage | ![]() |
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Notes
Emerald-Denver: LGBT Rights were always implied to be legal under the 1756 Union Acts of Emerald and the 1901 Federal Act of Denver, however they weren't blatantly laid out until the 1980/85 Union Acts which added Marriages, while the previous 2 only laid out Same-Sex Unions. The 1901 Federal Act(Later added to 1980/85 Act) was the first to offer Trans Rights, while discrimination against LGBT People were declared illegal in the 1756 Union Act, although it wouldn't enforced until the mid-1900's.
Sedunn: While Sedunn was generally tolerant of same-sex sexual activity and while there have been no specific laws governing who could be married, same-sex marriage and families were considered taboo well into the mid-1900s. Regarding laws concerning gender identity, the state does not keep specific records of it other than an entry in the medical journal at birth which cannot be edited.
UPRAN: Although a portion of judges recognize the pretext of homophobia in many cases of aggression or injustice, there isn't an actual law for these cases, and there can be judges that do not recognize the pretext of homophobia.