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KNOWLEDGEHUB
VIOLENCE AGAINST LGBTIQ+ PEOPLE

Around the world, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex people (LGBTIQ+) experience high rates of violence, often starting early in life. LGBTIQ+ people with intersecting inequalities, including race and ethnicity, Indigenous status, disability, and living with HIV, are even more vulnerable to violence.

01 THERE ARE DIVERSE EXPERIENCES OF VIOLENCE AGAINST LGBTIQ+ PEOPLE

LGBTIQ+ people are vulnerable to diverse experiences of violence, including physical assault, torture, threats, bullying, verbal harassment, targeted killing, ‘corrective’ rape and other forms of sexual violence. This violence takes place at home, in communities, in faith institutions, in educational settings, and in the workplace. LGBTIQ+ people experience high levels of intimate partner violence (IPV) in same-sex and opposite-sex relationships, including in forced marriages.

02 VIOLENCE AGAINST LGBTIQ+ PEOPLE IS UNDERPINNED BY HOMOPHOBIA, STIGMA, DISCRIMINATION AND RIGID GENDER NORMS

Many countries criminalise same-sex sexual acts and restrict gender diversity. LGBTQI+ people often face unequal access to resources and services, including health care, education, housing, employment, and legal redress, which heightens their vulnerabilities to violence. They also often experience challenges accessing supportive violence response services. Perpetrators of IPV may draw on the social marginalisation and vulnerabilities of LGBTIQ+ people to assert control, for example, by threatening to “out” them.

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03 THERE IS EMERGING EVIDENCE AND GUIDANCE TO PREVENT VIOLENCE AGAINST LGBTIQ+ PEOPLE

The majority of IPV interventions focus on heterosexual, cisgender couples, and there is a lack of funding for and evaluations of initiatives to prevent violence against LGBTIQ+ people. Yet, important considerations are emerging from efforts to prevent violence against LGBTIQ+ people, including:

  • Employ context-specific approaches as each county and LGBTQI+ movement has different opportunities and barriers to address violence
  • Additional safety measures may be needed such as confidentiality in contexts with legal sanctions and social risks for LGBTIQ+ individuals
  • Challenging prejudicial attitudes towards LGBTIQ+ people and transforming harmful gender norms is key to prevent violence against this population and for broader gender equality
  • Like other forms of violence, it is important to address risks for violence against LGBTIQ+ people across the socio-ecological model to prevent violence

Without addressing and transforming the gendered structural inequalities that continue to oppress and disadvantage women, preventing violence against women and LGBTI people will remain elusive. Our Watch, 2017

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