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"THE YOGYAKARTA PRINCIPLES – A NEW TOOL FOR HUMAN RIGHTS"

YOUTH IN ACTION PROJECT - "EVS FOR SOCIAL CHANGE" (MARCH 2009 - AUGUST 2009)

CAPACITY BUILDING ON SOCIAL INCLUSION OF LBGT PEOPLE (AUGUST 2007 - APRIL 2008)

DOCUMENTING HATE SPEECH IN LITHUANIAN MEDIA (FEBRUARY 2006 - MAY 2007)

RAINBOW DAYS’ 2007 (APRIL 2007 - MAY 2007)

EQUAL PROJECT "OPEN AND SAFE AT WORK.LT" (JUNE 2006 - JUNE 2008)

IMPLEMENTING EQUALITY FOR LESBIANS AND GAYS NORDIC WAY (JANUARY 2004 - MAY 2004)

DEVELOPMENT OF LGL YOUTH GROUP IN LITHUANIA (FEBRUARY 2004 - JUNE 2004)

EQUAL TREATMENT CAMPAIGN (MARCH 2004 - MARCH 2005)

CHALLENGES TO FAMILY POLICIES AND LAW IN EXPANDING EUROPE (NOVEMBER 2003 - SEPTEMBER 2004)

COMBATING DISCRIMINATION IN EMPLOYMENT (NOVEMBER 2002 - SEPTEMBER 2003)

REPORT AND HUMAN RIGHTS SEMINAR ON ADVOCACY FOR LESBIAN AND GAY PEOPLE

BALTIC ANTIDISCRIMINATION PROJECT (JUNE 2002 - APRIL 2003)

ADVOCACY FOR THE UNDER-REPRESENTED: TACKLING HUMAN RIGHTS OF GAYS AND LESBIANS IN LITHUANIA

 

DOCUMENTING HATE SPEECH IN LITHUANIAN MEDIA (FEBRUARY 2006 - MAY 2007)

The principal aims of “Documenting hate speech in Lithuania” project were:

•To provide a resource for practitioners by collecting documentation on the hate speech issues against LGBT people in Lithuania (in media);
•To provide an information material for the LGBT community which would allow to raise awareness on the issue;
•To promote greater understanding and awareness of the effects of hate towards society in general;
•To identify strategies and measures to establish a greater protection of the LGBT people, against whom the hate speech is targeted, in general and separate cases.

This brief study focused on discursive patterns employed by the Lithuanian press and TV to present LGBT people during the period of February 13, 2006, to May 29, 2007. This study described how the topic of homosexuality and LGBT people has been presented and on what modes of representation the Lithuanian press and TV have been drawing when they have represented gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender people. Not only it quantified the presence or absence of LGBT people and assess how they are described in the press and on TV, but it also presented a closer rhetorical and discursive analysis of images associated with them. Do any instances of Lithuanian media rhetoric qualify as hate speech? What beliefs, knowledge, attitudes, norms and values underlie the media rhetoric on LGBT people?

To download publication “Not private enough?: homophobic and injurious speech in the Lithuanian media” http://www.atviri.lt/index.php/lgl/leidiniai/1367


 
 
 
 
© Lithuanian Gay League (LGL) 2007