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Abstract: In 2019, Angolan officials voted to change their penal code to make homosexual acts legal and create protections against discrimination based on sexual orientation. Western outlets touted this change as a triumph for global LGBTQIA+ activism broadly and sub-Saharan African LGBTQIA+ rights specifically. But what does the penal code mean for the LGBTQIA+ community in Angola? Laws that establish new legal rights may make minor steps in altering individuals' lives. Referring to fifty semistructured interviews conducted from 2022–23 and using a discursive meaning-making approach, I argue that while global actors welcomed progress, local benefits were mixed, with little progress gained and increased skepticism about future action from the government.
Robert Tanner Bivens (Sat,) studied this question.