LGBT rights in the Isle of Man


Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights in the British Crown dependency of the Isle of Man have evolved substantially since the early 2000s. Private and consensual acts of male homosexuality on the island were decriminalised in 1992. LGBT rights have been extended and recognised in law since then, such as an equal age of consent, employment protection from discrimination, gender identity recognition, the right to enter into a civil partnership, the right to adopt children and the right to enter into a civil marriage.
While not part of the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man has also followed the UK's example in incorporating the European Convention on Human Rights into its own laws through the Human Rights Act 2001.

Law regarding same-sex sexual activity

Prior to September 1992, same-sex sexual activity was a criminal offence. After decriminalisation, the age of consent was set at 21, which at that time was the same age as in the United Kingdom. In 2001, the age of consent for male homosexuals was lowered to eighteen by the Criminal Justice Act 2001 . In 2006, by the Sexual Offences Act 2006 , the age of consent was lowered again to sixteen, becoming gender-neutral for all sexual conduct, regardless of gender and sexual orientation.
Section 9 of the Sexual Offences Act 1992 continues to apply the criminal law to some "unnatural offenses" between men. Sub-sections and make "buggery" and "gross indecency" between men offences if one or both of the parties is under sixteen and also if the acts are committed "elsewhere than in private." The meaning of this is defined in Section 10: not in private means that "more than two persons are present" or that the location is "any place to which the public have or are permitted to have access, whether on payment or otherwise."

Pardon scheme law

A reformed Sexual Offences and Obscene Publications Bill 2019 underwent a "community consultation period" until February 2019, and was introduced to the Tynwald in October 2019. This proposed law will pardon historical gay sex offences committed prior to 1992 and is explicitly based on the UK's Alan Turing law of 2017.
In October 2019, the Isle of Man House of Keys introduced and passed the bill at its second reading unanimously. It now heads to the clauses stage to be read out line by line in a committee.

Unqualified apology

The Isle of Man's Chief Minister Howard Quayle has issued an "unqualified apology" to gay men convicted of same-sex offences under previous Manx laws. He made the comments as a bill, which will see men convicted of consensual homosexual offences pardoned, had its final reading in the House of Keys.
Mr Quayle said he could not erase "past injustice" but hoped new legislation would "start to heal some of the pain". Gay rights campaigner Alan Shea said it was a "great day for the Isle of Man".
"The families that have lost children have just received an apology. Maybe now we can all heal, but parents will never forget their children," he said. Homosexual acts were decriminalised on the Isle of Man in 1992, 25 years later than in England and Wales, and 12 years after Scotland.

Recognition of same-sex relationships

Same-sex unions can be recognised through civil partnerships or marriage. The Isle of Man Parliament legalised civil partnerships in April 2011 and same-sex marriages in July 2016.

Civil partnerships

Since 2011, same-sex couples have been provided with civil partnerships. A civil partnership bill passed all stages of both the House of Keys and the Legislative Council and was signed into law on 15 March 2011. The Civil Partnership Act 2011 took effect on 6 April 2011. It was decided in 2014 that same-sex marriages from England, Wales and Scotland as well as other relationships performed abroad would be treated as civil partnerships on the island, until same-sex marriage is legalised.

Same-sex marriage

On 9 June 2015, Chief Minister Allan Bell announced his intention to repeal the law barring same-sex marriage on the island. Following public consultation on the issue, a bill to legalise same-sex marriage in the Isle was introduced to House of Keys on 2 February 2016. A public consultation and government response was concluded by 22 January 2016, and the bill passed its third reading in the House on 8 March by a vote of 17–3. Following a number of technical amendments at the clauses stage, the bill passed its third reading in the Legislative Council on 26 April 2016 by a vote of 6–3. The House of Keys unanimously approved the amendments to the bill on 10 May, and royal assent was granted on 19 July 2016. The law went into effect on 22 July 2016.
The first same-sex marriage to be registered on the Isle of Man was that of Marc and Alan Steffan-Cowell, who converted their civil partnership into a marriage on 25 July 2016. The first same-sex marriage to be performed on the island occurred on 30 July, between Luke Carine and Zak Tomlinson.

Adoption and family planning

By the Civil Partnership Act 2011 , same-sex couples in the Isle of Man have been granted equal access to full joint or stepchild adoption since 6 April 2011.
Additionally, lesbian couples have access to artificial insemination.

Discrimination protections

Under the Employment Act 2006 , which took effect on 1 September 2006, the Isle of Man adopted legislation which made it unlawful to dismiss employees on the grounds of their sexual orientation. At the time, LGBT reports from the Isle of Man stated that the island's Government was "falling behind".
In 2013, after a highly publicised case on the island involving a lesbian couple who were not allowed to rent a house by a church leader, Chief Minister Alan Bell announced that legislation to outlaw all forms of discrimination in goods and services would be introduced. A draft bill, based on the British Equality Act 2010, would replace all existing anti-discrimination laws into one piece of legislation. Consultation on the bill ended in November 2014. In August 2015, the Government published its response to the consultation. The measure had its first reading in the 11-member Legislative Council on 8 March 2016. The bill passed its second reading by a vote of 6-3 on 22 March. 12 amendments to the bill were proposed within the clauses stage and all passed. The bill passed its third reading by a vote of 5-4 on 14 June 2016. The legislation was approved by the House of Keys on 7 March 2017, with amendments. On 28 March, the Legislative Council concurred with the amendments. Royal assent was granted on 18 July 2017. The Equality Act 2017 was phased in, with much of the law having come into force on 1 January 2019.
The Equality Act 2017 lists age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, and sexual orientation as protected characteristics and grounds of non-discrimination. Sexual orientation is defined as "a person's inherent romantic or sexual attraction towards persons of the same sex, persons of the opposite sex, or persons of either sex". In addition, "not being romantically or sexually attracted to persons of either sex is also a sexual orientation".

Gender identity and expression

persons are allowed to change their legal gender and to have their new gender recognised as a result of the Gender Recognition Act 2009 .

Summary table