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Recognition of same-sex unions in Germany

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*Laws passed, but not yet taken effect.

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Since 1 August 2001, Germany has allowed registered partnerships for same-sex couples. The Life Partnership Act (German: Eingetragene Lebenspartnerschaft) was a compromise between proponents of same-sex marriage and supporters of the conservative interpretation of marriage. The act grants a number of rights enjoyed by married, opposite-sex couples.

On 17 July 2002, the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany upheld the act. [1] The Court found, unanimously, that the process leading to the law's enactment was constitutional. The 8-member Court further ruled, with three dissenting votes, that the substance of the law conforms to the constitution, and ruled that these partnerships could be granted equal rights to those given to married couples. (The initial law had deliberately withheld certain privileges, such as joint adoption and pension rights for widow(er)s, in an effort to observe the "special protection" which the constitution provided for marriage and the family. The court determined that the "specialness" of the protection was not in the quantity of protection, but in the obligatory nature of this protection, whereas the protection of registered partnerships was at the Bundestag's discretion.)

On 12 October 2004, the Gesetz zur Überarbeitung des Lebenspartnerschaftsrechts (Life Partnership Law (Revision) Act) was passed by the Bundestag, increasing the rights of registered life partners to include, among other things, the possibility of stepchild adoption and simpler alimony and divorce rules, but excluding the same tax benefits as in a marriage. By October 2004, 5,000 couples had registered their partnerships.[1]

In December 2006, a poll conducted by the Angus-Reid Global Monitor, seeking public attitudes on economic, political, and social issues for member-states of the European Union found that Germany ranked seventh supporting same-sex marriage with 52% popular support, behind the Netherlands (82%), Sweden (71%), Denmark (69%), Belgium (62%), Luxembourg (58%), and Spain (56%) (sharing this position with the Czech Republic); German attitudes on this social issue were above the European Union average of 44%. [2]

Under the current leadership it is difficult to ascertain the future of this issue. The Green Party and the The Left have acknowledged their support of the legalization of same-sex marriage.

In July 2008, Federal Constitutional Court of Germany ruled that a transsexual person who transitioned to female after having been married to a woman for more than 50 years could remain married to her wife and change her legal gender to female. It gave the legislature one year to effect the necessary change in the relevant law. (La Presse)

[edit] See also

Recognition of same-sex partners for purposes of immigration

Non-EU citizens who are same-sex partners of EU-citizens are considered on the same standing as spouses for the purposes of immigration rights.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Federal Constitutional Court of Germany:Urteil des Ersten Senats vom 17. Juli 2002 (german)

[edit] External links

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