New Study: Social Attitudes Toward Gays and Lesbians Rapidly Changing in Developing World

Social Attitude Changes in Developing World Caused by Government Policy Changes

Washington - October 13, 2017 – Today, Center for Global Development Senior Fellow Charles Kenny and Researcher Dev Patel released a new study that finds that just as social attitudes toward gays and lesbians have changed rapidly in the developed world, these attitudes are also changing in the developing world. The study also suggests that the changes in social attitudes often follow and are caused by changes in government policy toward gays and lesbians.

The study, "Norms and Reform: Legalizing Homosexuality Improves Attitudes" uses public opinion data on this issue from the Gallup World Poll and the World Values Survey and matches changes in attitudes over time with the timeline of laws concerning same-sex decriminalization. The study also includes data visualizations that show legal trends over time and geography.

"Improving rights for gays and lesbians is a critical human rights issue. In some countries, people are still imprisoned and even killed because of their sexual orientation. Even where it is not illegal, gays and lesbians face violence, discrimination, and social stigma," said Charles Kenny. "But our research makes clear that in the developing world as a whole, both laws and attitudes are changing for the better.  And legal change is not only a positive step in itself, it can also help shift attitudes."

The study finds:

"A number of developing countries were decades ahead of the United States in legalizing homosexual sex and ensuring gay marriage rights, but they aren't given much credit," said Kenny. "While there are still disastrous human-rights violating policies in countries like Zimbabwe and Uganda that demand our attention, they are – thankfully – increasingly the exception."

You can read the full study at https://www.cgdev.org/publication/norms-and-reform-legalizing-homosexuality-improves-attitudes.

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