
Below are the 2025 scores of the 49 European countries based on the Anti-Discrimination Legislation Applicable to Education indicator.
Below are the 2022 scores of the 49 European countries based on the Anti-Discrimination Legislation Applicable to Education indicator.
Below are the 2018 scores of the 49 European countries based on the Anti-Discrimination Legislation Applicable to Education indicator.
Education must be safe, inclusive, and accessible to all learners. To ensure the effective realisation of the right to education, a strong anti-discrimination legislative framework is essential. All states are responsible for guaranteeing and safeguarding this right by explicitly addressing discrimination based on sexual orientation (SO), gender identity and gender expression (GIGE), and variations in sex characteristics (SC) within educational environments.
So-called “anti-propaganda laws”, which ban the discussion or representation of SOGIGESC issues and identities in educational settings and other public spaces, create significant obstacles to inclusive education. As such, these laws are given greater weight in assessments than the mere absence of protective measures.
At the time of drafting this report, 32 Council of Europe Member States and Kosovo, have anti-discrimination laws in place that specifically set out SOGIGESC as protected grounds: Albania, Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Kosovo, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Montenegro, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Portugal, Romania, San Marino, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Out of these countries, 19% protect only on the ground of sexual orientation, while 41% protect on the grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity and expression, and 40% also include variations in sex characteristics in their anti-discrimination legislation.
8 countries have anti-LGBTQI laws that ban the mention of LGBTQI topics to people under the age of 18 and in schools. This was already the case in Azerbaijan, Belarus, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, and Russia. Now Bulgaria, Georgia, and Turkey have also introduced similar measures.
9 countries have no anti-discrimination legislation.
countries have anti-discrimination laws in place that specifically set out SOGIGESC as protected grounds.
countries have anti-LGBTQI laws that ban the mention of LGBTQI topics to people under the age of 18 and in schools.
countries have no anti-discrimination legislation.
Below are the 10 indicators we used to evaluate each country. Each indicator is rated out of 10 based on how many grounds of discriminations it covers (ie. Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity & Expression, and Sex Characteristics) and whether the country has anti-LGBTQI measures in place. The highest possible score for a country is 100, and the lowest is -15. You can find more details about our methodology in our full Report.