Centre for European Politics, Security and Integration (CEPSI), SSEES, UCL
Doi
Abstract
This paper considers why attitudes towards gays and lesbians in
Latvia appear to be more intolerant than in all other EU member states. The paper
argues that while the legacy of communist discourses on homosexuality and
the impact of post-communist transition have played a role in shaping attitudes
towards sexuality and sexual minorities in Central and Eastern Europe, these
factors cannot sufficiently explain the divergence among post-communist states
and, in particular, do not account for Latvia’s extreme position. While acknowledging
that intolerance towards non-heteronormative sexualities cannot be explained
by a single factor, the paper argues that homosexuality has become particularly
reviled in Latvia because it has been widely discursively constructed as
a threat to the continued existence of the nation