Das gay project cork

ILGA World is an umbrella organisation representing more than 2, member organisations from over countries and territories.

Full membership is open to woman-loving woman, gay, bisexual, transitioned or intersex non-profit organisations, while associate membership is unlocked to any other association. All members have to back the aims of ILGA World.

If your organisation has concerns with its call being published, please notify us at membership (a) ilga (dot) org.

Learn more about what organism an ILGA Nature member can deliver to your organisation, and apply now! The executive board of ILGA Society will review your application during its next meeting, and our secretariat will get in feel with you shortly after that.

Afghanistan

  • Afghanistan LGBTIQ+ Organization (ALO)

Bangladesh

  • Asexual Celebration Asia
  • Badhan Hijra Sangha
  • Bandhu Social Welfare Society
  • Boys of Bangladesh
  • Inclusive Bangladesh
  • Noboprobhaat
  • Prantoz Foundation
  • Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation
  • Shacheton Hijra Odhikar Jubo Shangha
  • Shawprova
  • Somporker Noya Setu
  • Voluntary Organization for the Needy
  • Women&#;s Windo

    Bangladesh

      • Asexualoften called “ace” for concise, it refers to a person who experiences petite to no sexual attraction to anyone and/or does not experience desire for sexual contact. Asexuality is a sexual orientation existing on a spectrum, and asexual people may encounter no, little or conditional sexual attraction. More Celebration Asia
      • Badhan Hijra Sangha
      • Bandhu Social Welfare Society
      • Boys of Bangladesh
      • Inclusive Bangladesh
      • Noboprobhaat
      • Prantoz Foundation
      • Rainbow Nari O Shishu Kallyan Foundation
      • Shacheton Hijra Odhikar Jubo Shangha
      • Shacheton Hijra Odhikar Shangha
      • Shawprova
      • Somporker Noya Setu
      • Voluntary Organization for the Needy

    2 anonymous organisation(s).

    Bhutan

    • Lhak-Sam (BNP+) (associate member)
    • Queerpreviously used as a derogatory term to point to to LGBT individuals in the English language – and still perceived as offensive by some - queer has been reclaimed by people who detect beyond traditional gender categories and heteronormative social norms. Although not universally recognized, it is often used as a catch-all to include many people within the larg

      Turn off the online hate megaphone

      Open Letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, First Minister Michelle O’Neill, deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly & Taoiseach Simon Harris


      Civil society groups across Amazing Britain, Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and across the planet call on political leaders to act quickly to prevent further violence, protect communities at uncertainty, and hold social media platforms to account for the harms they cause

      No matter who you are, where you come from or how you identify, we all deserve to walk down the street without fear, to be safe and to exist a decent life. People across Great Britain, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland obtain pride in building welcoming communities.

      But far right actors, racists and certain politicians are spreading fear determined to create mayhem, intimidate and silence communities. They try to benefit by making us scared of each other, scapegoat marginalised communities and try to change us against each other. 

      Calls to racist violence were recorded across all social media platforms in the lead up

      Cork’s vital statistics

      Rimini Protokoll’s % Cork puts a cross-section of society on stage. Are they more than just a number?

      Von Peter Crawley

      / The Irish Times

      Imagine this. There has been a revolution. The People’s Republic of Cork – previously only the dream of a T-shirt – has develop a political reality. A series of referenda shape its constitution. Gay marriage and adoption rights are enshrined into law by a 98 per cent majority. Abortion is legalised by a landslide. Cannabis narrowly escapes legalisation. Debt forgiveness for homeowners in negative equity is just about passed.

      That, at least, is how people currently living in Cork metropolis express their views in Rimini Protokoll’s engagingly- staged live survey. If statistics reduce people to mere figures, the German documentary theatre makers reverse the process here, working in collaboration with Irish director Una McKevitt to recruit a cross-section of population – or, rather, the portion of society willing to appear onstage.

      Seeing the participants amass, aged from two to nearly 80, is t