Same-sex couples, same-sex partnerships and homosexual marriages.
Same-sex couples, same-sex partnerships and homosexual marriages. A focus on cross-country differentials
Since 1989, nine European countries (Belgium, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Iceland, The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden) provided
same-sex couples the opportunity to register their union in front
of a representative of the State and thus contracting legal rights
and duties.
This conference aims to gather the researchers working on the
topic in order to picture the current state of the research on the
different countries. The research purpose is directed towards the
explanation of why people register/marry (or not) and to find out
which type of society favours the registration/marriage and
why.
The study of the same-sex couple will be at the heart of our
concern.
The knowledge of the social interactions involved in the process
of same-sex registrations and marriages can be addressed through
various disciplines: the law (which differences of status, rights
and obligations exist between the registered or not, married or
not, couples?), demography (which populations of couples do
register or not, marry or not?) anthropology and sociology (which
social conditions in which institutions lead to the passage from
not-registered to registered and not-married to married and in what
sense homosexual and heterosexual couples differ?).
A cross-national analysis will reveal if people register/marry more
frequently here than there and under which conditions and will seek
to find out if higher frequencies of registration reflect higher
numbers of couples (per inhabitant) or higher propensities to
register. It will reveal also the driving forces, which are to
interact at different levels (individual and societal).