家长对性取向和性别多样性的态度:挑战澳大利亚学校中对男女同性恋、双性恋和变性者的歧视。

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 FAMILY STUDIES
Jacqueline Hendriks, Neil Francis, Hanna Saltis, Katrina Marson, Jenny Walsh, Tasha Lawton, Sharyn Burns
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引用次数: 0

摘要

澳大利亚正在考虑对宗教学校歧视女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和变性者(LGBT)学生和教职员工的权利进行立法改革。我们利用全国家长数据集(n = 2418),研究了家长对性取向、性别多样性、仇视同性恋和变性者的态度。在所有宗教、学校部门和态度声明中,绝大多数家长都表示了积极的态度(62.7%-93.5%)。只有少数家长明确表示持消极态度(1.6%-20.2%)。仅有子女在非宗教学校就读的家长与有子女在任何宗教学校就读的家长在宗教信仰方面的对比显示,两者之间的差异很小。在天主教家长中,子女在天主教学校就读的家长与子女只在非宗教学校就读的家长对 LGBT 问题的态度相似,大多数家长持赞成态度,这表明大多数让子女就读天主教学校的天主教家长是在无视或不了解天主教教义的情况下这样做的。研究结果表明,绝大多数送孩子上宗教学校的家长对不同性取向、性别多样性以及解决仇视同性恋和变性者问题的行动持支持态度。这一实证证据与宗教学校基于家长的价值观和态度而要求有权歧视男女同性恋、双性恋和变性者的呼吁相矛盾。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Parental attitudes towards sexual orientation and gender diversity: challenging LGBT discrimination in Australian schools.

As Australia considers legislative reform regarding the rights of religious schools to discriminate against LGBT students and staff, claims are often made that religious parents or those enrolling children in religious schools do not affirm diversity of sexuality or gender. Using a national dataset of parents (n = 2418), attitudes towards sexual orientation, gender diversity, homophobia and transphobia were examined. Across all religiosities, school sectors and attitudinal statements, significant majorities of parents reported positive attitudes (62.7%-93.5%). Only small minorities expressly reported negative attitudes (1.6%-20.2%). Pairwise religiosity comparisons between parents with children only at a secular school, versus any religious school, revealed few differences. Amongst Catholic parents, those with children at Catholic schools and those with children only at secular schools, held similar attitudes towards LGBT issues and a majority held favourable attitudes, suggesting most Catholic parents who enrol their children in Catholic schools do so despite or in ignorance of Catholic doctrine. Findings suggest a significant majority of parents sending children to religious schools hold supportive attitudes towards diverse sexual orientations, gender diversity, and actions to address homophobia and transphobia. This empirical evidence contradicts religious schools' calls for the rights to discriminate against LGBT persons based on parental values and attitudes.

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CiteScore
4.60
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