跳到主要內容區塊

性別平等辦公室109年加入國際彩虹城市網絡(Rainbow Cities Network)組織,自110年起參與該組織年度國際反恐同、恐雙性戀與恐跨性別影像展(IDAHOBIT)。

 

110年 LGBTIQ社群中的多元交織性影像展

標題:LGBTIQ社群中的多元交織性影像展

攝影:Sky Chris、台灣同志諮詢熱線

每個人在這裡都可以感覺舒適,無論你是男是女、是彎是直、順性別或跨性別、原住民或新住民、富有或貧窮、年少或年老、有無殘疾、什麼宗教信仰,我們相信各種交織能將獨特串連在一起。

 

2021 Intersectionality within the LGBTIQ Community

Title: Intersectionality connects uniqueness

Photographer: Sky Chris & Taiwan Tongzhi

Short Text:

Everyone can feel comfortable here, whether you are men or women, gay or straight, cisgender or transgender, indigenous people, or immigrants, rich or poor, younger or elderly people, with or without disabilities, with the same or different religious beliefs. We believe that intersectionality connects uniqueness.

 

111年 酷兒難民

標題:愛無國界

攝影:台灣伴侶權益推動聯盟

目前,台灣的同性婚姻法不允許其公民與同性婚姻未合法化國家的伴侶結婚。 這種情況使得跨國同性伴侶成為難民。法律不承認,在新冠肺炎疫情衝擊中,他們被迫分開數月甚至數年。

 

台灣伴侶權益推動聯盟作為臺北市性別平等委員會的成員,一直努力解決這個問題,透過訴訟爭取跨國同性伴侶團聚。在法律修改之前,許多伴侶仍在為自己在這塊土地相識、相愛和共同生活的權利而奮鬥。


2022 Queer Refugees 

Title: Love knows no boundaries

Photographer: Taiwan Alliance to Promote Civil Partnership Rights (TAPCPR)

Short Text:

Same-sex marriage law in Taiwan does not allow its citizens to marry to their partner from the country where gay marriage is not legalized. This situation makes transnational same-sex couples as refugees. Without legal recognition, they have been forced to be separated for months, even years, especially when the COVID-19 pandemic strikes.

 

TAPCPR, the committee member of Taipei Gender Equality Commission, has been working hard on this issue. They won at least four lawsuits over transnational same-sex marriage. However, many couples still fight for their rights to meet, to love, and to live together on this island till the law is amended.

 

112年酷兒青年

主題:我就是我,無論我是誰。

攝影:台灣同志諮詢熱線

 

民國89年台灣南部,葉永誌,一名性別氣質較為陰柔的小男孩,在學校被霸凌,後來不幸身亡。民93年,台灣通過了《性別平等教育法》,以防止類似悲劇再次發生,也悼念了這位「玫瑰男孩」。但徒法不足以自行,多年來,同志與性別平等倡議團體、政府和整個公民社會一直在共同努力,以實現安全、免於暴力校園的目標。希望有一天,每個孩子都可以大聲說出「我就是我,無論我是誰。」

 

2023 Queer Youth

Title: I am whoever I am when I am it

Photographer: Taiwan Tongzhi (LGBTQ+) Hotline Association

Short Text:

 

In 2000, a young boy from southern Taiwan, named “Yeh Yung-Chih”, had been bullied and died in school because of his “over-femininity.” In 2004, Taiwan passed the laws “Gender Equity Education Act” to prevent the tragedy like this happening again, and also to commemorate the “Rose Boy,” Yeh Yung-Chih. The laws alone are not enough though. The LGBTQ+ and gender equality advocacy groups, governments, and the whole civil society have been working hard and together to achieve the goal of creating safe and violence-free campuses for years. One day, each young kid can say it out loud “I am whoever I am when I am it.”