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<title>Reports</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11728/30</link>
<description>Εκθέσεις</description>
<items>
<rdf:Seq>
<rdf:li rdf:resource="http://hdl.handle.net/11728/12069"/>
<rdf:li rdf:resource="http://hdl.handle.net/11728/12063"/>
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<dc:date>2026-04-05T23:36:51Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/11728/12069">
<title>Obstacles to the Free Movement of Rainbow Families in the EU</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11728/12069</link>
<description>Obstacles to the Free Movement of Rainbow Families in the EU
Tryfonidou, Alina
This study, commissioned by the European Parliament’s Policy&#13;
Department for Citizens’ Rights and Constitutional Affairs at the&#13;
request of the PETI Committee, examines: (i) the obstacles that&#13;
rainbow families (same-sex couples, with or without children)&#13;
face when they attempt to exercise their free movement rights&#13;
within the EU, including examples in petitions presented to the&#13;
PETI committee; (ii) how EU Member States treat same-sex&#13;
married couples, registered partners, unregistered partners, and&#13;
their children in cross-border situations; and (iii) action that EU&#13;
institutions could take to remove these obstacles.
</description>
<dc:date>2021-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/11728/12063">
<title>Advancing Liveable Lives for Lesbians in Europe— Intersectional Challenges and Future Policymaking</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11728/12063</link>
<description>Advancing Liveable Lives for Lesbians in Europe— Intersectional Challenges and Future Policymaking
Boulila, Stefanie C.; Tryfonidou, Alina; Carastathis, Anna; Lagerman, Julia; Olasik, Marta
This research report has been commissioned&#13;
by the German Federal Ministry for Family&#13;
Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth&#13;
(BMFSFJ). This report assesses the need for a&#13;
specific focus on lesbians in European equality&#13;
and anti-discrimination policies.1&#13;
 The use of&#13;
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) as&#13;
a policy category has been criticised for lumping&#13;
together diverse life realities. The call to focus on&#13;
lesbians can be read as a response to the gender&#13;
indifference and erasure of lesbians from LGBT&#13;
policy debates.&#13;
Lesbian lives in Europe are highly diverse. The&#13;
term lesbian is a contested political and social&#13;
category. As an identity, it is most commonly&#13;
claimed by women who desire other women. This&#13;
departure from the heterosexual norm exposes&#13;
lesbians to marginalisation and discrimination.&#13;
However, not all lesbians identify with the category woman. For many lesbians, the category&#13;
woman is a source of gender stereotypes. Certain&#13;
lesbians break with norms of feminine gender&#13;
presentation. Others claim alternative terms to&#13;
consolidate their sexual identities with their&#13;
gender identity, for example, by identifying as&#13;
butch lesbians, genderqueer or non-binary&#13;
lesbians, trans*2&#13;
 lesbians or femme lesbians. Nonetheless, in policy and academic discourses,&#13;
the term sexual orientation is often used without&#13;
paying attention to gender. Academically, the category lesbian has therefore been deemed helpful&#13;
in naming and describing how heteropatriarchal&#13;
norms affect women (Banerjea et al., 2019; Butler,&#13;
1993; Boulila, 2015). The category lesbian renders&#13;
visible the specific effects homophobia, heterosexism and heteronormativity have on women and&#13;
those who identify as lesbians but not as women.&#13;
The term lesbian, therefore, captures specific experiences of discrimination, disenfranchisement and&#13;
violence.&#13;
This report queries how European equality and&#13;
anti-discrimination policies can better account&#13;
for the needs of lesbian women. Besides understanding lesbian as a contested and heterogeneous category, this report understands the&#13;
category woman as inter*- and trans*-inclusive.&#13;
In order to reveal this inclusivity in addition to&#13;
marking many lesbians’ suspicion towards the&#13;
category woman, the term will be marked with&#13;
an asterisk (woman*). Due to the study’s limited&#13;
time frame, this report will not be able to provide&#13;
an in-depth exploration of the specific challenges&#13;
faced by trans* and intersex lesbians. Neither will&#13;
it be able to examine the specific challenges of bisexual women*. However, it does aim to uncover issues that are relevant to bisexual, trans* and&#13;
intersex women* where possible. In instances&#13;
where issues affect lesbian, bisexual, trans* and&#13;
intersex women* (LBTI women*), the report will&#13;
make these different groups visible through a&#13;
nuanced use of language.&#13;
The report commonly refers to the term heteronormativity, which critiques the assumption that&#13;
heterosexuality is the primary, natural and normal&#13;
expression of sexuality. It further uses the term&#13;
homophobia to refer to anti-gay hostility. The report does not use the term in its psychological&#13;
connotation to refer to fear, as this has been criticised as individualising (Browne et al., 2015;&#13;
Boulila, 2019b). Heteronormativity and homophobia are instead understood to be connected to&#13;
each other and an expression of social power&#13;
relations. This report evaluates the need for specific equality&#13;
and anti-discrimination policies that focus on&#13;
lesbians. Chapter two describes the methodology&#13;
that was used to identify the intersectional needs&#13;
of lesbians in Europe. Chapter three, ‘Lesbian&#13;
rights under EU law’, authored by Alina Tryfonidou, explores the legal framework for LGBT and&#13;
in particular lesbian rights. It examines European&#13;
Union (EU) provisions, instruments and European&#13;
Court of Justice (ECJ) rulings that benefit lesbians.&#13;
Chapter four unfolds in twelve thematic subsections that illustrate not only specific inequalities&#13;
faced by lesbians but also relevant policy areas, institutions, strategies and best practice examples.&#13;
Chapter five explores convergences and divergences between European and national equality&#13;
and anti-discrimination policies. These convergences and divergences further provide insight&#13;
into national policymaking and draw attention&#13;
to the situated challenges of lesbians in Poland,&#13;
Sweden, Greece and Germany. Chapter six closes&#13;
with a summary and policy recommendations.
</description>
<dc:date>2020-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
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