- Source: Third gender law (Germany)
Germany's third gender law introduced the gender "diverse" (German: divers) as a third option in alternative to "female" and "male" in the German civil status register.
The law, codified in § 45b PStG (German: Personenstandsgesetz), laid down an administrative procedure for assigning a diverse gender. It requires a doctor's note confirming "a variant of sex development". The diverse gender can be assigned to people listed in the register, at birth or later in life. When individuals change their legal gender later in life, they can also change their first name.
The administrative process is officially aimed at intersex people, but nonbinary people (who were not intersex) have also tried to use it, due to its manageable burden compared to the gender entry change procedure for trans people (Transsexuals Act). However, the Federal Court of Justice ruled on 22 April 2020 that § 45b could not be used by a nonbinary person who was not intersex.
The third gender law took effect on 22 December 2018. A bill to ease the process for transgender, intersex and non-binary non-intersex people, the Self-Determination Act, was passed on April 12, 2024, and took effect in November 2024.
Legislative history
Germany established a third gender option because, on 10 October 2017, the Federal Constitutional Court's ruled that it was constitutionally necessary. The court decided that it was unconstitutional to refuse a third gender option for people "not clearly identifiable" as female or male, citing Articles 1, 2, and 3 of the German constitution. This ruling came in response to a constitutional complaint by Vanja, an at the time 26-year-old intersex person from Leipzig. Vanja had sued his way up to the constitutional court.
The constitutional court ruling for the right to a third gender came shortly after federal elections in 2017. The elections led to the formation of a grand coalition of Christian Democrats, Social Democrats and the Christian Social Union. The coalition agreement was signed on 12 March 2018, and Horst Seehofer (Christian Social Union) became minister of the interior.
Minister Seehofer's legal draft provided for the third gender to be called "other" (German: anderes). However, justice minister Katarina Barley and family minister Franziska Giffey, both of the social democrats, blocked this proposal. In their view, "other" was disparaging. Barley favoured "further" (German: weiteres) while Giffey preferred "inter/diverse" (German: inter/divers).
The government draft, hashed out within the grand coalition, settled on a third gender entry called German: divers, as well as an option for an empty gender entry.
Trivia
In 2021, an online form created to book covid vaccination appointments around Cologne and Dusseldorf mistakenly offered users to declare their gender as German: Taucher, a literal translation of the English "divers" as in "people who dive". The booking form was made by the regional public doctors' association German: Kassenärztliche Vereinigung Nordrhein.
See also
Legal recognition of intersex people
Legal recognition of non-binary gender
Intersex rights in Germany
Transgender rights in Germany
Transsexuals Act
Self-Determination Act
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Liberalisme
- Hukum Nürnberg
- Pemerkosaan
- Perkawinan sejenis
- John/Eleanor Rykener
- Perbudakan
- Saskia Sassen
- Genosida Gaza
- Edith Cavell
- Helios
- Third gender law (Germany)
- Self-Determination Act (Germany)
- Third gender
- Transgender rights in Germany
- Legal recognition of non-binary gender
- Non-binary gender
- Gender transition
- Gender fluidity
- Gender-affirming surgery
- Legal status of transgender people