Curated by Peter Schulte · Published 2026-07-09 · Last updated 2026-07-09
LGBTQ+ rights are advancing globally at a pace that would have been unimaginable a decade ago.
Marriage equality has arrived in Southeast Asia for the first time. Colonial-era sodomy laws are being erased from statute books across the Caribbean and Africa. Courts from Seoul to Kyiv to Manila are recognizing same-sex couples where legislators have not.
Transgender recognition is accelerating too — from Nepal swearing in its first trans MP to Kenya’s courts ordering gender-marker reforms, to Cuba dropping the surgical requirement for ID changes.
These wins span every continent and every branch of government: legislatures, courts, international bodies, and the ballot box. Taken together, they form the most sustained expansion of LGBTQ+ dignity in recorded history.
Key takeaways
- Marriage equality is now law in Thailand (first in Southeast Asia), Greece (first Orthodox-majority country), Switzerland, and Cuba — all within a few years.
- Courts are outpacing legislatures: judges in South Korea, Ukraine, Lithuania, the Philippines, and Poland have recognized same-sex couples where no law yet exists.
- Colonial-era anti-gay laws have been struck down in Botswana, Dominica, Saint Lucia, and the Dominican Republic — a wave of decriminalization sweeping the Global South.
- Transgender milestones are multiplying: the first trans Congress member (U.S.), first trans MP (Nepal), first trans Cannes and Oscar nominee, and landmark gender-marker reforms in Cuba and Kenya.
- LGBTQ+ elected officials in the U.S. have more than tripled since 2017, and openly gay men now lead France and the Netherlands as prime ministers.
Recovery at a glance
| Subject | Recovery | Where |
|---|---|---|
| Thailand | First Southeast Asian country to legalize same-sex marriage | Southeast Asia |
| Greece | First Orthodox-majority country to legalize same-sex marriage | Europe |
| Botswana | Colonial anti-sodomy law permanently erased from penal code | Africa |
| Sarah McBride | First openly transgender person elected to U.S. Congress | United States |
| Ranjita Shrestha | First openly transgender MP sworn into parliament | Nepal |
| EU Court of Justice | All 27 member states must recognize same-sex marriages from other EU countries | European Union |
| South Korea Supreme Court | Same-sex couples entitled to equal National Health Insurance spousal benefits | South Korea |
| Cuba | Trans people can change gender markers without surgery; same-sex marriage legalized | Cuba |
| Karla Sofía Gascón | First openly trans actor to win Cannes Best Actress and receive Oscar nomination | International |
| Argentina | First-ever conviction of state officials for crimes against trans women during dictatorship | Argentina |
| LGBTQ+ U.S. elected officials | More than tripled since 2017 | United States |
| UN Human Rights Council | First-ever resolution specifically supporting intersex rights | Global |
| Kenyan High Court | Ordered parliament to pass trans rights law; ordered gender-marker applications accepted | Kenya |
| Aetna | $2 million fund to reimburse LGBTQ+ couples charged up to $100,000 fertility 'queer tax' | United States |
| Maryland Medicaid | First U.S. state program to cover voice therapy, fertility preservation, and broad gender-affirming care | United States |
| Japan | First standardized national LGBTQ+ education framework for schools and workplaces | Japan |
On this page
- Why this matters
- What’s driving the comeback
- Marriage equality and family recognition
- Decriminalization and striking down colonial-era laws
- Transgender rights: recognition, representation, and protection
- LGBTQ+ political representation and elected firsts
- Anti-discrimination law, institutional protections, and policy wins
- Cultural, religious, and social turning points
- The outlook
- Frequently asked questions
Why this matters
The scale of recent LGBTQ+ rights progress is without historical precedent. In less than five years, marriage equality has reached its first Orthodox-majority nation, its first Southeast Asian country, and a Caribbean nation that once criminalized same-sex relations.
What makes this moment distinctive is that courts and legislatures are moving simultaneously — and in some cases, courts are forcing legislatures to act. Kenya’s High Court ordered parliament to pass trans protections. Poland’s Supreme Administrative Court required EU marriage recognition despite no domestic law. The Philippine Supreme Court extended property rights without waiting for Congress.
This is no longer a story confined to wealthy Western democracies. The milestones in this collection span Latin America, Eastern Europe, East Africa, East Asia, and the Pacific — suggesting a genuinely global shift in how states treat their LGBTQ+ citizens.
By the numbers
- 64.1% of Swiss voters approved marriage equality in a national referendum before it took effect in July 2022.
- Roughly two-thirds of Cuban voters approved a sweeping family code legalizing same-sex marriage and adoption, after more than 79,000 neighborhood consultation meetings.
- Greece’s parliament voted 176 to 76 to legalize same-sex marriage, becoming the first Orthodox-majority country to do so.
- Aetna agreed to a $2 million reimbursement fund for LGBTQ+ couples charged up to $100,000 in fertility treatment costs denied to heterosexual couples.
- LGBTQ+ elected officials in the United States have more than tripled since 2017.
- The UN Human Rights Council resolution on intersex rights noted that roughly 1.7% of people are born with variations in sex characteristics — about as common as having red hair.
- Poland’s Supreme Administrative Court ruling affects an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 same-sex couples.
What’s driving the comeback
The most powerful engine behind these victories is the courts. From Seoul to Santo Domingo to Saint Lucia, judges have struck down laws that legislatures lacked the political will to repeal — often invoking constitutional rights to dignity, privacy, and equality that were never written with LGBTQ+ people in mind but apply to them nonetheless.
International and supranational bodies are amplifying domestic wins. The EU Court of Justice ruling requiring all 27 member states to recognize same-sex marriages instantly transformed the legal reality for couples in countries like Poland and Romania that have no domestic protections. The first UN resolution on intersex rights signals that international norm-setting is catching up to grassroots advocacy.
Representation is both a product of progress and a driver of it. Molly Cook winning a Texas Senate seat, Sarah McBride reaching Congress, Ranjita Shrestha being sworn into Nepal’s parliament — each of these firsts makes the next one more thinkable. The tripling of LGBTQ+ elected officials in the U.S. since 2017 is evidence that visibility compounds.
Marriage equality and family recognition
The most consequential LGBTQ+ rights victories of this era have been legal recognition of same-sex relationships — through legislation, referendum, and court order. What’s striking about this wave is its geographic diversity: it now spans Catholic Europe, a historically Orthodox nation, a communist-governed Caribbean island, and Southeast Asia for the first time, often driven by popular vote or judicial mandate rather than legislative initiative.

Greece becomes first Orthodox-majority country to legalize same-sex marriage
Greece’s parliament voted 176 to 76 to legalize same-sex marriage, making it the first Orthodox-majority country in the world to do so. The law also gave same-sex couples the right to adopt, ending years of legal limbo for existing families.

Cuba approves same-sex marriage after nationwide consultations
Cuba legalized same-sex marriage and adoption after roughly two-thirds of voters approved a sweeping new family code in a national referendum. The draft had been workshopped at more than 79,000 neighborhood meetings, drawing over 300,000 citizen suggestions — making it one of the most participatory legislative processes in the country’s history.

Switzerland’s ‘Marriage for All’ takes effect after 64% referendum vote
Switzerland’s Marriage for All law took effect July 1, 2022, with same-sex couples marrying just months after voters approved the measure by 64.1%. Among the first to wed in Geneva was a couple who had been together for two decades.

Thailand becomes first Southeast Asian country to legalize marriage equality
Marriage equality arrived in Thailand on January 22, 2025, when the first same-sex weddings became legal, including a mass ceremony in Bangkok for more than a thousand couples. The law gives same-sex partners the same rights as heterosexual couples, including adoption and inheritance.

Ukrainian court recognizes same-sex couple as a legal family for the first time
A Kyiv court ruled that a same-sex couple constitutes a legal family — the first such ruling in Ukrainian history. The case was brought by a serving soldier and his partner of over ten years, underscoring the urgency of legal recognition for LGBTQ+ couples during wartime.

Lithuanian court grants legal family status to same-sex couple
The Vilnius City District Court became the first court in Lithuania to grant legal family status to a same-sex couple, ordering the state to register their relationship. The ruling was the first of its kind in a Baltic state and a country that has no domestic same-sex partnership law.

Poland ordered to recognize same-sex EU marriages in landmark ruling
Poland’s Supreme Administrative Court ruled that same-sex marriages performed elsewhere in the EU must be formally recognized in Poland, despite the country offering no domestic legal recognition for same-sex unions. Rights groups estimate that between 30,000 and 40,000 same-sex couples stand to benefit.

EU’s top court rules same-sex marriages must be recognized across all 27 member states
The Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that all 27 member states must legally recognize same-sex marriages performed anywhere else in the bloc, meaning couples no longer lose their rights when they cross a border. The ruling has immediate implications for countries in Eastern Europe that have resisted domestic recognition.

Italy’s top court rules both same-sex mothers must appear on birth certificates
Italy’s Constitutional Court ruled on May 22, 2025, that both women in a same-sex couple must be legally recognized as parents of children conceived abroad through assisted reproduction. The decision closes a legal gap that had left some children without a recognized second parent.

Philippines Supreme Court grants same-sex couples property co-ownership rights
The Philippine Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples in committed de facto unions are entitled to the same co-ownership protections as opposite-sex couples under existing Civil Code provisions. The decision represents landmark recognition in a country with no domestic same-sex partnership law.
Decriminalization and striking down colonial-era laws
A defining feature of recent LGBTQ+ progress is the systematic dismantling of anti-gay laws inherited from British and other colonial administrations. Courts in the Caribbean, Africa, and Latin America are ruling that these 19th-century statutes violate their own constitutions — a legal argument that is proving remarkably powerful across very different legal systems.

Botswana permanently erases colonial anti-sodomy law from its penal code
Botswana officially removed its colonial-era anti-sodomy law from the national penal code in 2026, converting a 2019 court victory into permanent written statute. The original provision, imported under British rule, had once threatened same-sex couples with up to seven years in prison.

Dominica’s High Court strikes down colonial-era ban on same-sex activity
Dominica’s High Court struck down a colonial-era ban on consensual same-sex activity between adults, with the judge finding it violated constitutional rights to liberty, privacy, and free expression. The case was brought by an anonymous gay man who challenged a law that had been on the books since before independence.

Saint Lucia decriminalizes same-sex conduct, ending laws imposing up to 10 years in prison
Saint Lucia’s High Court struck down colonial-era laws that had imposed up to 10 years in prison for consensual same-sex conduct between adults. The court ruled the statutes violated Saint Lucia’s own constitution — a judgment that mirrors rulings in other Caribbean nations in recent years.

Dominican Republic’s Constitutional Court strikes down anti-gay military and police laws
The Dominican Republic’s Constitutional Court ruled that criminalizing same-sex conduct among police officers and soldiers violates constitutional protections for privacy, nondiscrimination, and personal freedom. The landmark decision removes explicit anti-gay provisions from the military and police codes.

South Korean court recognizes same-sex health insurance benefits for the first time
The Seoul High Court ruled that denying spousal health insurance benefits to a same-sex couple violated their rights — the first such recognition in South Korean judicial history. The case was brought by So Seong-wook after the national insurer reversed his partner’s approved coverage.

South Korea’s Supreme Court upholds equal health insurance rights for same-sex couples
South Korea’s Supreme Court affirmed that same-sex couples must receive the same National Health Insurance spousal benefits as heterosexual couples, declaring that denying them violates human dignity and the right to pursue happiness. The ruling built directly on the earlier Seoul High Court decision and represents the highest judicial recognition of same-sex couple rights in the country’s history.
Transgender rights: recognition, representation, and protection
Transgender rights have emerged as one of the fastest-moving frontiers in LGBTQ+ progress — advancing simultaneously through legislative reform, court orders, electoral firsts, and cultural breakthroughs. What connects these stories is a common demand: that trans people be recognized as who they are, in law and in public life, without surgical or bureaucratic barriers that apply to no one else.

Cuba allows trans people to change gender markers without surgery
Cuba’s National Assembly passed legislation allowing transgender Cubans to update gender markers on official identity documents through a simple administrative declaration, removing the requirement for surgery. The reform marks a significant step forward for trans rights in Latin America.

Kenyan court orders parliament to pass a transgender rights law
The Eldoret High Court issued what advocates called the first ruling of its kind on the African continent, directing Kenya’s parliament to enact explicit legal protections for transgender people. The case had begun in 2019, when a trans person sought recognition that existing law consistently denied.

Kenya’s High Court orders gender-marker applications to be processed within 60 days
A Kenyan High Court ruled that government agencies must begin accepting applications to update gender markers on IDs, passports, birth certificates, and academic records within 60 days. Justice Bahati Mwamuye found that the state’s refusal to process such applications was unconstitutional.

Nepal swears in its first openly transgender member of parliament
Ranjita Shrestha became the first openly transgender person sworn into Nepal’s parliament, a milestone built on decades of grassroots advocacy and a legal foundation dating to a 2007 Supreme Court ruling. Nepal has long been recognized as a regional leader on legal gender recognition.

Romania ordered to recognize trans man’s identity in landmark EU victory
Romanian courts ordered the government to legally recognize Arian Mirzarafie-Ahi as male — a recognition the United Kingdom had already granted him in 2020. For years he had lived with two different legal identities depending on which side of a border he was on.

Maryland Medicaid covers unprecedented range of gender-affirming procedures
Maryland’s Medicaid program began covering gender-affirming care well beyond hormones and surgery, including voice therapy, fertility preservation, and hair and scar removal under a law that took effect January 1, 2024. Patients can only be denied coverage if the service is medically unnecessary.

Massachusetts Senate passes Shield Act 2.0 to protect abortion and gender-affirming care
The Massachusetts Senate passed Shield Act 2.0 by 37-3 on June 26, 2025, strengthening protections for patients and providers seeking abortion care and gender-affirming care within the state. The updated law bars state agencies from cooperating with out-of-state or federal investigations targeting those seeking protected care.
Chase Strangio becomes first openly trans lawyer to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court
Chase Strangio made history on December 4, 2024, as the first openly transgender lawyer to present oral argument before the U.S. Supreme Court. The case, U.S. v. Skrmetti, challenges Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for trans minors.

Sarah McBride becomes first transgender person elected to U.S. Congress
Sarah McBride won Delaware’s only U.S. House seat by nearly 15 points in November 2024, becoming the first openly transgender person elected to Congress in its 235-year history. At 34, she arrived with a record of firsts already behind her, including a Delaware state senate seat.

Hawaii elects its first transgender state lawmaker
Kim Coco Iwamoto became Hawaii’s first transgender state lawmaker by unseating the sitting House Speaker in a Honolulu Democratic primary, winning with 49.3% of the vote. She won without the backing of the party establishment.

Karla Sofía Gascón becomes first trans woman to win Best Actress at Cannes
Karla Sofía Gascón became the first openly transgender woman to win Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival, sharing the 2024 honor with her three Emilia Pérez co-stars in a collective award. The win marked a milestone for trans visibility in mainstream cinema.

Karla Sofía Gascón becomes first openly trans actor nominated for an Oscar
Karla Sofía Gascón became the first openly transgender person ever nominated for an acting Oscar, earning a best actress nod for her role in Emilia Pérez, which swept 13 nominations total. The achievement followed her Cannes win and underscored a sustained moment of trans visibility in international film.
LGBTQ+ political representation and elected firsts
Electoral politics has become one of the most visible measures of LGBTQ+ progress — and the pace of firsts has accelerated sharply. These stories share a common thread: openly LGBTQ+ people winning in places, offices, and margins that would have seemed impossible a decade ago, representing a compounding shift in who voters are willing to send to the highest levels of government.

LGBTQ+ elected officials in the U.S. have tripled since 2017
LGBTQ+ elected officials across the United States have more than tripled since 2017, according to data documented by the Victory Fund Institute. Wins are occurring not just in coastal cities but in suburban districts and rural counties — a sign that the trend is geographic as well as numerical.

Molly Cook becomes first openly LGBTQ+ person elected to the Texas Senate
Molly Cook won her Houston-area special election with 57% of the vote, becoming the first openly LGBTQ+ person ever elected to the Texas Senate. An emergency room nurse and sixth-generation Texan, she campaigned on the idea that laws passed in Austin should reflect the people who live there.

Gabriel Attal becomes France’s first openly gay prime minister
At 34, Gabriel Attal became France’s youngest-ever prime minister in January 2024 and the first openly gay person to hold the role under the Fifth Republic. His appointment was widely read as a signal that being gay is no longer a barrier to leading at the highest levels of French government.

Rob Jetten becomes the Netherlands’ first openly gay prime minister
Rob Jetten became prime minister of the Netherlands in 2025, making him the first openly gay head of government in Dutch history. Jetten, leader of the progressive D66 party, previously served as Minister for Climate and Energy Policy.
Anti-discrimination law, institutional protections, and policy wins
Beyond recognition, LGBTQ+ progress increasingly means closing the practical gaps — in healthcare coverage, school safety, blood donation eligibility, and workplace protection — that formal legal equality has not always addressed. These stories share a focus on implementation: turning rights on paper into protection in practice.

Aetna agrees to equal fertility coverage for LGBTQ+ people in landmark settlement
Aetna agreed to a $2 million fund to reimburse LGBTQ+ couples who had been charged up to $100,000 for fertility treatment denied to heterosexual couples under a discriminatory policy. The settlement ends a practice that required same-sex couples to fund a year of attempted insemination before qualifying for the same IVF coverage heterosexual couples received.

California becomes first state to ban forced outing of queer students
California became the first state in the country to ban schools from forcibly outing queer students, after Governor Newsom signed the SAFETY Act into law. The bill also shields teachers from retaliation if they decline to out students to parents.

Kentucky’s governor bans conversion therapy on LGBTQ+ minors
Kentucky’s conversion therapy ban, signed by Governor Andy Beshear, takes effect immediately and protects every minor seeing a licensed mental health professional in the state. The order also blocks state and federal funding from supporting the practice.

New Zealand allows gay and bisexual men to donate blood under equal rules
New Zealand’s blood service replaced a blanket three-month deferral for gay and bisexual men with the same questions asked of every donor regardless of orientation, effective May 4, 2026. A University of Auckland study confirmed the policy shift was supported by the evidence.

Illinois set to become first U.S. state to ban book bans in public libraries and schools
Illinois’s House Bill 2789 heads to the governor’s desk with a clear mechanism: libraries and schools that impose book bans lose state funding. Rather than criminalizing censorship, the law uses funding eligibility to enforce a standard of open access.

Japan to roll out LGBTQ+ education nationwide for the first time
Japan approved the country’s first standardized national LGBTQ+ education framework, covering schools, universities, and workplaces. The plan — backed by the ruling party and headed toward cabinet endorsement — would embed awareness training across Japanese society as a matter of national policy.

UN Human Rights Council passes first-ever resolution on intersex rights
The UN Human Rights Council adopted its first-ever resolution specifically supporting the rights of intersex people — roughly 1.7% of the global population, born with variations in sex characteristics. The resolution was brought forward by Australia, Chile, Finland, and South Africa.

Argentine court convicts ex-officers of crimes against trans women during the dictatorship
A court in La Plata convicted 11 former officials of Argentina’s 1976–1983 military dictatorship for crimes against humanity specifically committed against transgender women — believed to be the first ruling of its kind anywhere in the world. Eight trans plaintiffs testified in the case.
Cultural, religious, and social turning points
Legal victories matter most when they are accompanied by shifts in cultural and institutional attitudes — and several of the most striking recent milestones have come not from courts or legislatures but from religious bodies, international organizations, and the media. These stories mark the moment when institutions that long excluded LGBTQ+ people began, however haltingly, to reckon with that history.

Church of Norway formally apologizes to LGBTQ+ members for decades of harm
The Church of Norway formally acknowledged in 2025 that its historical teachings caused real harm to LGBTQ+ members over many decades, going beyond its 2017 approval of same-sex marriage blessings. The apology represented a rare institutional admission of responsibility from a major Christian denomination.

Vatican publishes its first official report quoting married gay men
A Vatican publication released in May 2026 included detailed first-person testimonies from LGBTQ+ Catholics — among them two married gay men — marking the first time such voices appeared in an official Vatican document. One contributor wrote about wounds inflicted by the Christian community, which the report did not minimize or rebut.

South Korea’s national census counts same-sex couples as spouses for the first time
South Korea’s 2025 Population and Housing Census allowed same-sex couples to register as spouses or cohabiting partners in national statistics for the first time. Previously, the system returned an error when same-sex couples attempted to describe their relationship.
The outlook
The trajectory is clearly positive, but uneven. Courts are delivering wins in countries — South Korea, Ukraine, the Philippines — where legislative majorities remain elusive, creating a gap between legal recognition and social or political acceptance that will take years to close.
The most durable wins appear to be those embedded in statute or constitution, not just court orders. Botswana’s move to write its 2019 court victory into the permanent penal code, and Cuba’s referendum-backed family code, illustrate how advocacy groups are working to lock in gains against future reversal.
What the arc of these stories suggests is that momentum, once established, tends to build. Japan’s first national LGBTQ+ education framework, the Church of Norway’s formal apology, the Vatican’s first publication quoting married gay men — these are cultural and institutional shifts that accompany legal ones. The question is not whether progress will continue, but how fast, and whether the institutions that have driven it can hold their ground.
Frequently asked questions
Which country was first in Southeast Asia to legalize same-sex marriage?
Thailand became the first country in Southeast Asia to legalize same-sex marriage, with the law taking effect on January 22, 2025, and the first weddings — including a mass ceremony in Bangkok for over a thousand couples — taking place that day.
Which countries have decriminalized homosexuality recently?
Several countries have struck down colonial-era anti-gay laws in recent years: Botswana permanently removed its anti-sodomy law from the penal code in 2026, Dominica’s High Court decriminalized same-sex activity in 2024, Saint Lucia’s High Court followed in 2025, and the Dominican Republic’s Constitutional Court struck down anti-gay military and police laws in 2025.
Who was the first openly transgender person elected to the U.S. Congress?
Sarah McBride, a Democrat from Delaware, became the first openly transgender person elected to the U.S. Congress in November 2024, winning Delaware’s only House seat by nearly 15 percentage points.
Does Finland have homeless people?
This collection of LGBTQ+ rights milestones does not cover Finnish homelessness. Finland is notable in this collection for co-sponsoring the UN Human Rights Council’s first-ever resolution on intersex rights in 2024, alongside Australia, Chile, and South Africa.
What is the EU Court of Justice ruling on same-sex marriage recognition?
The Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that all 27 EU member states must legally recognize same-sex marriages performed anywhere else in the bloc. This means couples no longer lose their legal rights when they cross a border — a ruling with major implications for countries like Poland and Romania that have no domestic same-sex partnership law.
How many LGBTQ+ people hold elected office in the United States?
According to data from the Victory Fund Institute, LGBTQ+ elected officials across the United States have more than tripled since 2017 — an unprecedented expansion that now extends beyond coastal cities into suburban districts and rural counties.
About this article
🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
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