Revision as of 01:02, 8 December 2007 edit71.103.31.169 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit | Revision as of 10:55, 16 December 2007 edit undo65.196.126.5 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{gay unions}} | {{gay unions}} | ||
There is continued debate in the ]ian legislative and judicial branches about the legal status of same-sex couples |
There is continued debate in the ]ian legislative and judicial branches about the legal status of same-sex couples. While there has been a bill in ] since 1995 which aims to estabilish same-sex civil unions, which has never been put to a vote, a 2006 decision by the ''Supremo Tribunal de Justiça'' | ||
<!--'Superior Tribunal de Justiça' or 'Supremo Tribunal Federal'?--> | <!--'Superior Tribunal de Justiça' or 'Supremo Tribunal Federal'?--> | ||
states that same-sex couples are ''de facto'' partners, which have less rights than civil unions |
states that same-sex couples are ''de facto'' partners, which have less rights than civil unions. | ||
A meeting to discuss gay rights and battle homophobia will be held in May 2008 and involve representative from the president's office, cabinet members and legislators. Lula da Silva has recommended that the agenda of this meeting include the discussion on the recognition of same-sex relationships and proposals to allow gay and lesbian couples to adopt children. <ref> | A meeting to discuss gay rights and battle homophobia will be held in May 2008 and involve representative from the president's office, cabinet members and legislators. Lula da Silva has recommended that the agenda of this meeting include the discussion on the recognition of same-sex relationships and proposals to allow gay and lesbian couples to adopt children. <ref> | ||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
Civil unions, ''de facto'' partnerships, "stable unions" under commonlaw and actual marriage are the four "categories" for a relationship in Brazil. No same-sex couple is yet considered married in Brazil, but there are varying levels of debate about the other categories. | Civil unions, ''de facto'' partnerships, "stable unions" under commonlaw and actual marriage are the four "categories" for a relationship in Brazil. No same-sex couple is yet considered married in Brazil, but there are varying levels of debate about the other categories. | ||
Homosexual Brazilians who can prove that their relationship is a "stable union" will be treated by the National Social Security Institute no differently than a married couple in cases of retirement or death |
Homosexual Brazilians who can prove that their relationship is a "stable union" will be treated by the National Social Security Institute no differently than a married couple in cases of retirement or death. However, there is not a consensus about the definition of stable union. The policy also allows people in same-sex relationships to declare their partners as dependents on income tax returns. The National Social Security Institute's policy change is the result of a recent court ruling. Brazil allows foreign partners of its homosexual citizenry to receive residency permits. | ||
On ], ] a ] judge ruled that same-sex couples can adopt children |
On ], ] a ] judge ruled that same-sex couples can adopt children. It is believed the case is the first in Brazil where a ] couple has been allowed to jointly adopt a child. | ||
], a federal prosecutor, filed a Public Civil Action in July 2005 charging the country's prohibition of ] as being opposed to the 1988 constitution |
], a federal prosecutor, filed a Public Civil Action in July 2005 charging the country's prohibition of ] as being opposed to the 1988 constitution, which outlaws "prejudice as to origin, race, sex, colour, age and any other forms of discrimination." The 99-page <ref>http://www.prsp.mpf.gov.br/taubate/acp/acp_casamento.pdf Full text of the ''Ação Civil Pública'' asking the recognition of same-sex marriage in Brazil {{pt icon}}</ref> Action document mentions several court rulings and newspaper reports on gay rights. The court ruling decided the matter was not to be decided in court: it should rather be settled by Congress. Had the prosecutor's arguments been accepted by the judge, the decision would have immediately allowed same-sex marriage in all Brazilian states. | ||
The state of ] gives same-sex benefits to the partners of government employees |
The state of ] gives same-sex benefits to the partners of government employees. | ||
==Bill No. 1151== | ==Bill No. 1151== | ||
{{main|Brazilian Congressional Bill No. 1151}} | {{main|Brazilian Congressional Bill No. 1151}} | ||
A bill on gay civil unions has been introduced in Congress: former congresswoman ] ] aims to change federal law in order to establish same-sex civil unions |
A bill on gay civil unions has been introduced in Congress: former congresswoman ] ] aims to change federal law in order to establish same-sex civil unions. The bill had been pending in the House since 1995 and was the theme of the 2005 ]. The bill has been debated many times, but has never been brought to a vote. Then-Speaker of the House ] was expected to end debate and bring the bill to a vote in late 2005, but corruption charges forced his resignation. Despite the anticipated vote, Calvalcanti strongly opposed the bill. | ||
==Civil Unions in Rio Grande do Sul== | ==Civil Unions in Rio Grande do Sul== | ||
The ] of ] legalized ]s after a court decision in ].<ref>, ], 5 March 2004</ref> Same-sex couples in committed relationships can register at any notary public office. Although it does not affect federal rights |
The ] of ] legalized ]s after a court decision in ].<ref>, ], 5 March 2004</ref> Same-sex couples in committed relationships can register at any notary public office. Although it does not affect federal rights, it gives same-sex couples more equality in many areas. Same-sex couples who register have the right to jointly own property, establish custody of children, and claim the right to pensions and property when one partner dies. | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== |
Revision as of 10:55, 16 December 2007
Part of the LGBTQ rights series | ||
Legal status of same-sex unions | ||
---|---|---|
Marriage
Recognized
|
||
Civil unions or registered partnerships but not marriage
|
||
Minimal recognition
|
||
See also
|
||
Notes
|
||
LGBTQ portal | ||
There is continued debate in the Brazilian legislative and judicial branches about the legal status of same-sex couples. While there has been a bill in Congress since 1995 which aims to estabilish same-sex civil unions, which has never been put to a vote, a 2006 decision by the Supremo Tribunal de Justiça states that same-sex couples are de facto partners, which have less rights than civil unions.
A meeting to discuss gay rights and battle homophobia will be held in May 2008 and involve representative from the president's office, cabinet members and legislators. Lula da Silva has recommended that the agenda of this meeting include the discussion on the recognition of same-sex relationships and proposals to allow gay and lesbian couples to adopt children. Cite error: A <ref>
tag is missing the closing </ref>
(see the help page). Brazil allows homosexual couples the right to inherit each other's pension and social security benefits.
Civil unions, de facto partnerships, "stable unions" under commonlaw and actual marriage are the four "categories" for a relationship in Brazil. No same-sex couple is yet considered married in Brazil, but there are varying levels of debate about the other categories.
Homosexual Brazilians who can prove that their relationship is a "stable union" will be treated by the National Social Security Institute no differently than a married couple in cases of retirement or death. However, there is not a consensus about the definition of stable union. The policy also allows people in same-sex relationships to declare their partners as dependents on income tax returns. The National Social Security Institute's policy change is the result of a recent court ruling. Brazil allows foreign partners of its homosexual citizenry to receive residency permits.
On July 12, 2005 a São Paulo judge ruled that same-sex couples can adopt children. It is believed the case is the first in Brazil where a gay couple has been allowed to jointly adopt a child.
João Gilberto Gonçalves, a federal prosecutor, filed a Public Civil Action in July 2005 charging the country's prohibition of same-sex marriage as being opposed to the 1988 constitution, which outlaws "prejudice as to origin, race, sex, colour, age and any other forms of discrimination." The 99-page Action document mentions several court rulings and newspaper reports on gay rights. The court ruling decided the matter was not to be decided in court: it should rather be settled by Congress. Had the prosecutor's arguments been accepted by the judge, the decision would have immediately allowed same-sex marriage in all Brazilian states.
The state of Rio de Janeiro gives same-sex benefits to the partners of government employees.
Bill No. 1151
Main article: Brazilian Congressional Bill No. 1151A bill on gay civil unions has been introduced in Congress: former congresswoman Marta Suplicy bill project 1151 aims to change federal law in order to establish same-sex civil unions. The bill had been pending in the House since 1995 and was the theme of the 2005 São Paulo Gay Pride Parade. The bill has been debated many times, but has never been brought to a vote. Then-Speaker of the House Severino Cavalcanti was expected to end debate and bring the bill to a vote in late 2005, but corruption charges forced his resignation. Despite the anticipated vote, Calvalcanti strongly opposed the bill.
Civil Unions in Rio Grande do Sul
The state of Rio Grande do Sul legalized civil unions after a court decision in March 2004. Same-sex couples in committed relationships can register at any notary public office. Although it does not affect federal rights, it gives same-sex couples more equality in many areas. Same-sex couples who register have the right to jointly own property, establish custody of children, and claim the right to pensions and property when one partner dies.
Notes
- http://www.prsp.mpf.gov.br/taubate/acp/acp_casamento.pdf Full text of the Ação Civil Pública asking the recognition of same-sex marriage in Brazil Template:Pt icon
- Brazilian go-ahead for gay unions, BBC News, 5 March 2004
External links
- Template:En icon — Full text of Bill Project 1151 (Unofficial Translation)
See also
- LGBT rights in Brazil
- Marriage, unions and partnerships by country
- LGBT rights by country
- Timeline of LGBT history
- Homosexuality laws of the world
Civil unions in South America | |
---|---|
Sovereign states | |
Dependencies and other territories |