Same-sex marriage in Yukon
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Same-sex marriage has been legal in Yukon since July 14, 2004. This happened after a decision by the Supreme Court of Yukon. Yukon was the fourth place in Canada to allow people of the same sex to marry. It was also the seventh place in the whole world to do so, after the Netherlands, Belgium, Ontario, British Columbia, Quebec, and Massachusetts.
Yukon was the first of Canada's three territories to allow same-sex marriage. It did this before the whole country of Canada made it legal in July 2005, when the Parliament of Canada passed a law. This means Yukon was a leader in making sure everyone could get married, no matter who they loved.
Court ruling
In January 2004, two men named Rob Edge and Stephen Dunbar asked for a marriage licence in Whitehorse, but they were turned down. They wanted to be married in their own community. They went to court and asked the government to allow same-sex marriages.
In July 2004, a judge said the government had been unfair. He said that because other parts of Canada already allowed same-sex marriages, it wasn’t right for Yukon to refuse. The judge said that same-sex marriages could now happen in Yukon and told the government to give Edge and Dunbar a marriage licence. This made Yukon the fourth place in Canada to allow same-sex marriages.
Territorial legislation
In May 2002, the Yukon Legislative Assembly approved a bill allowing same-sex couples to adopt children together. This law started on January 1, 2003.
Later, on December 9, 2014, the Assembly changed the territorial Marriage Act to use the word "spouses" instead of "husband and wife." This change became official on June 1, 2015.
More changes happened in 2018 with the Equality of Spouses Statute Law Amendment Act. This law updated other laws to be fairer. MLA Kate White talked about how important human rights and progress are.
First Nations
The Indian Act affects many areas of life for First Nations in Canada, but it does not control marriage rules or how customary marriages are done. Marriage laws are mostly decided by provincial and territorial laws. However, the Indian Act can affect things like band membership and property rights on reserves.
While there are no records of same-sex marriages as known in Western legal systems, many Indigenous communities recognize identities and relationships that may fall within what is sometimes called the LGBT spectrum. This includes two-spirit individuals—people who see themselves as having both masculine and feminine qualities. In some cultures, two-spirit individuals assigned male at birth might wear women's clothing and take on roles usually linked to women. In the past, this identity sometimes allowed unions between two people of the same biological sex. Ethnographic sources show that the Dene recognized gender variance and had a special status for two-spirit people. First Nations have long-standing marriage traditions focused on community, family, and spiritual bonds. For example, customary Gwichʼin marriages include spiritual practices, feasts, and traditional dances. Marriages were exogamous, matrilineal, and mostly monogamous, although chiefs (khèhkwaii), shamans (dinjii dazhan), and wealthy men sometimes had more than one spouse. Similarly, Northern Tutchone marriages were traditionally exogamous and matrilineal, with bride service required, and chiefs (hákí) sometimes practicing polygyny.
Marriage statistics
Between July 2004 and July 2014, 44 same-sex couples married in Yukon. The 2016 Canadian census showed 70 same-sex spouses living in Yukon, and most of them—55 out of 70—were women. The census also found that about 1.9% of women in couples in Whitehorse were in same-sex relationships. This was the second highest number in Canada, just after Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories. For men, same-sex couples made up about 0.7% of all men in couples.
Religious performance
In July 2019, the Anglican Church of Canada decided that its local groups could choose to bless and perform marriages for two people who love each other. The Diocese of Yukon was one of these groups, and its rules allowed such marriages. Before this, the former leader of the Diocese of Yukon did not support these marriages.
Other groups also perform these special ceremonies, including the United Church of Canada, Quakers, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, and the Canadian Unitarian Council.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Same-sex marriage in Yukon, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Safekipedia