Legal recognition of same-sex partnerships: A comparative study of Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan
Legal recognition of same-sex partnerships: A comparative study of Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan
Legal recognition of same-sex partnerships and marriages has been at the forefront of media attention in East Asian societies. For our comparative study, we carried out qualitative in-depth interviews with 31 gay men and lesbians to investigate the nuanced understanding of marriage, family and sexual citizenship within the context of debates on marriage equality across Hong Kong, Japan and Taiwan. Expanding on the theoretical concepts in Chen’s ‘Asia as method’, Iwabuchi’s ‘inter-Asian referencing’ and Yue and Leung’s ‘queer Asia as method’, we aim to understand how the act of marriage is defined, conducted and rationalized amidst a web of social relations within each research locale. We argue that despite the variations in the structure and practice of kin relations, same-sex unions cannot be detached from the kinship institution in the three research sites. Our study points to a different perspective on same-sex marriage that goes beyond the binary of assimilation to/dismantling of the heterosexual marriage institution by attending to the structural and symbolic significance of the family and community.
Publication date
2019
Journal title, volume/issue number, page range
The Sociological Review, Volume: 68 issue: 1, page(s): 192-208.
ISSN
0038-0261 (print) 1467-954X (web)
Specialisation
Social Sciences
Theme
Gender and Identity