The most detailed map of gay marriage in america

the most detailed map of gay marriage in america

ILGA World maps are among the most common visual representations of how LGBTIQ people are affected by laws and policies around the world.

The scope of our long-standing rights mapping has expanded thanks to the ILGA World Database. With that platform, ILGA maps have grow interactive and constantly updated, to improved cover sexual orientationrefers to a person’s capacity for profound emotional, affectional and sexual attraction to - and intimate and sexual relations with - individuals of a distinct gender or the same gender or more than one gender. More, gender identityrefers to a person’s deeply felt internal and individual experience of gender, which may or may not correspond with the sex assigned at birth. More and verbalization, and sex characteristicsa term that refers to physical features relating to sex - including genitalia and other sexual and reproductive anatomy, chromosomes, hormones, and secondary physical features emerging from puberty. More (SOGIESCabbreviation standing for sexual orientation and gender self & expression, and sex characteristics. More) issues globally.

Our LGBTIQ rights maps cover more than 100 topics, as well as how SOGIESCabbrev

Views on LGBTQ Rights in All 50 States: Findings from PRRI’s 2023 American Values Atlas 

Executive Summary

Throughout 2023, PRRI interviewed more than 22,000 adults as part of its American Values Atlas, allowing for the ability to provide a detailed profile of the demographic, religious, and political characteristics of LGBTQ Americans. As in years past, this examination measures Americans’ attitudes on LGBTQ rights across all 50 states on three key policies: nondiscrimination protections, religiously based service refusals, and same-sex marriage. This year’s report also includes new study of the intersection between Christian nationalist views and LGBTQ attitudes in each state.

LGBTQ Americans skew younger, more Democratic, and less religious than other Americans.

  • More than one in five young Americans (18-29 years) distinguish as LGBTQ (22%). One in ten people ages 30-49 (10%), 6% of people between 50 and 64 years, and 3% of people 65 years or older recognize as LGBTQ. Twenty-four percent of Gen Z Americans (aged 18 to 25) identify as LGBTQ.
  • A plurality of LGBTQ Americans are Democrats (46%); nearly six in ten LGBTQ Americans consider themselves liberal politically (58%)

    Snapshot: LGBTQ Equality by State

    The Movement Advancement Project (MAP) tracks over 50 different LGBTQ-related laws and policies.  This chart shows the overall policy tallies (as distinct from sexual orientation or gender identity tallies) for each state, the District of Columbia, and the five populated U.S. territories. A state’s policy tally scores the laws and policies within each state that shape LGBTQ people's lives, experiences, and equality. The major categories of laws covered by the policy tally include: Relationship & Parental Recognition, Nondiscrimination, Religious Exemptions, LGBTQ Youth, Health Care, Criminal Justice, and Identity Documents.  

    Click on any state to view its detailed policy tally and state profile, or click "Choose an Issue" above to view maps on over 50 other LGBTQ-related laws and policies. 

    • High Overall Policy Tally (15 states + D.C.)

    • Medium Overall Policy Tally (5 states)

    • Fair Overall Policy Tally (3 states, 2 territories)

    • Low Overall Policy Tally (10 states, 3 territories)

    • Negative Overall Policy Tally (17 states)

      MAP Report: The National Patchwork of Marriage Laws Underneath Obergefell

      MEDIA CONTACT:   
      Rebecca Farmer, Movement Advancement Project
      rebecca@lgbtmap.org | 303-578-4600 ext 122

      As the Respect for Marriage Act moves through Congress, MAP’s March 2022 report on the landscape of varying state marriage laws around the country is a resource. MAP researchers are available to acknowledge questions and our infographics are available for use.  

      MAP’s report, Underneath Obergefell, explores the patchwork of marriage laws around the country. The report highlights the proof that a majority of states still have existing laws on the books that would ban marriage for same-sex couples – even though those laws are currently unenforceable under the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell.  

      If the U.S. Supreme Court were to revisit the Obergefell decision, the ability of same-sex couples to wed could again fall to the states, where a majority of states still have in place both bans in the rule and in state constitutions.   

      The policy landscape for state marriage laws can be broken into four major categ

      The Most Accurate Route of Gay Marriage Encourage in America

      Seen a few profile pictures convert in support of male lover marriage recently? The all-seeing eye of Facebook has seen quite a rare, and from that ocean of data, it’s whipped up a comprehensive guide of gay marriage aid in the America.

      Facebook users switch up their profile pictures for no reason all the time, including right after the Human Rights Campaign started pushing its pink-on-red equals indicate icon on Monday. But when you break down the data the way Facebook has, and account for the static, you can really see massive results.

      Nearly three million users changed their profile pictures last Tuesday alone. That’s a 120 percent grow from the Tuesday before. According to Facebook’s calculations, the age group mostly like to be doing the changing as a result of the campaign are around 30. The hottest geographic area for change, as shown by the map above, was Washtenaw County—home of Ann Arbor, Michigan and the University of Michigan—which knock a peak of about 6 percent equal signs.

      It’s so much more than an army of copy-pasted icons, too. There’s a virtually endless collection of clever (but mo