APA letter to Uganda president opposes anti-homosexuality bill
CU
RA
p
hot
o
gra
ph
y/
T
hi
nkst
o c k When Uganda President
Yoweri Museveni
announced that he
would use scientific
evidence about the
origins of sexual
orientation as the basis
for his decision on
whether to sign an anti-
homosexuality bill, APA
and other psychological
associations saw an
opportunity to educate.
In their letter to
the president, nine
organizations outlined
why supporting the
bill — which would
punish those in same-sex relationships with
up to life in prison —
is inconsistent with
science. For example,
one study has found
that 88 percent of gay
men and 68 percent of lesbians report they have no choice at
all about their sexual orientation (Sexuality Research and Social
Policy, 2010). Other research has shown that efforts to change
a person’s sexuality are largely ineffective and even harmful,
according to APA’s 2009 Task Force on Appropriate Therapeutic
Responses to Sexual Orientation.
Most important, the letter argues, discriminating against
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people negatively
affects both them and society — regardless of whether
sexual orientation is biological, a choice or, most likely, some
combination of multiple factors, says Clinton Anderson, PhD,
director of APA’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender
Concerns Office.
“The evidence suggests that reducing prejudice toward one
group will have a positive benefit on society in a broader way
than just improving the conditions for that particular group,”
he says.
Despite the letter and opposition from human rights
groups and governments worldwide, Museveni signed the
bill into law in February. Still, the letter was fruitful because
it mobilized a global community of psychologists around an
important human rights issue, says Sharon Horne, PhD, an
associate professor of counseling and school psychology at the
University of Massachusetts Boston who serves as one of APA’s
two representatives to the International Psychology Network
on LGBTI issues and advised APA on the letter. Seventy-seven
countries, including many in Africa and the former Soviet
Union, for example, criminalize same-sex sexual acts with
terms of imprisonment and even the death penalty, she says.
“Using our body of science to raise awareness and advocate
for LGBT people’s mental health around the world is really
important,” Horne says, noting that in many countries, LGBTI
rights are backsliding rather than moving forward. “This is the
time.”
In addition to APA, the letter was signed by the Association
of Lesbian, Gay, & Bisexual Psychologies Europe; the Colombian
Psychological Society; the Guatemalan Psychological
Association; the Hong Kong Psychological Society; the
Hungarian Psychological Association; the Interamerican Society
of Psychology; the International Union of Psychological Science;
and the Psychological Society of South Africa.
To read the letter, go to www.apa.org/pi/lgbt/resources/
uganda-letter.aspx.
— ANNA MILLER