Introduction
On 4 March 2018, the Chilean movie A Fantastic Woman (Spanish: Una mujer fantástica) won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The movie depicts the hardships that Marina, played by transgender actress Daniela Vega, faces after the sudden and unexpected death of her lover Orlando. Left alone to grieve, Marina endures humiliation from Orlando's family and discrimination from Chile's institutions that deny her identity as a woman. For a short moment, the recognition that the movie received brought trans rights into the global spotlight.Footnote 1
In Chile, the award galvanised political support for the Gender Identity Law (GIL). Approved in September 2018 after languishing for over five years in Congress, the law establishes individuals’ right to modify their national identification documents without the need to change their physical appearance or receive prior court authorisation. It drew inspiration from a similar law passed in Argentina in 2012, forming part of a wave of expanding LGBTQ+ rights in Latin America.Footnote 2 Trans rights advocates had long campaigned for a gender identity law for Chile, where identification documents are crucial for access to education, employment, and health services.Footnote 3 Initially presented by a partisan group of Senators in consultation with civil society organisations, right-wing legislators, and conservatives rejected the bill, framing their opposition in terms of Christian values and against the ‘gender ideology’ that purportedly informed the bill. We argue that this backlash dissipated in the wake of the international recognition for A Fantastic Woman. International recognition made support for trans rights temporarily a matter of national pride, thereby facilitating the approval of the law.
The case illustrates how external status cues can foster normative change by mobilising affect in domestic audiences. Norm research has long recognised that emotions and affect play a role in the spread of norms or ‘standards of appropriate behavior’.Footnote 4 According to Martha Finnemore and Kathryn Sikkink, ‘a combination of pressure for conformity, desire to enhance international legitimation, and the desire of state leaders to enhance their self-esteem’ often explains the acceptance of new norms.Footnote 5 Yet the politics of affect are often sidelined in the literature centred on persuasion and the power of the better argument.Footnote 6
Prominent accounts of normative change in International Relations argue that actors accept or, at least, adhere to social norms because they strive for coherence.Footnote 7 The view is in line with cognitive dissonance theory, which posits that individuals have an innate drive to reduce or eliminate inconsistencies that arise from tensions between cognitions.Footnote 8 However, whereas norm research expects cognitive dissonance to lead to behavioural or attitudinal change, experimental and social psychology suggests that people may respond to dissonance in many different ways as attitudes influence the processing of information.
In contrast to existing research that emphasises the importance of evidence-based and reasoned debate in the global spread of norms, we suggest that status concerns can (temporarily) trigger affective responses that may lead to norm diffusion without ‘rhetorical entrapment’ or persuasion.Footnote 9 In the Chilean case, the international recognition of A Fantastic Woman attracted attention and evoked a sense of national pride that made it desirable for erstwhile detractors to support the law despite their opposition on normative (values-based) grounds. Therefore, the case offers a twofold contribution: by exploring how status cues are perceived domestically, the study adds to the literature on status concerns and domestic political change;Footnote 10 by connecting norm research with debates on the politics of emotions and affect, it contributes to the growing literature on contestation and what Anette Stimmer termed ‘alternative endings of the norm life cycle’ that do not culminate in internalisation.Footnote 11
The remainder of the article proceeds as follows. The next section outlines the central argument that status cues can facilitate normative change through the mobilisation of affect. The third section focuses on the saliency of status concerns and their connection to the expansion of LGBTQ+ rights in post-authoritarian Chile. The subsequent section introduces the political process leading to the adoption of the Gender Identity Law in 2018. The study then examines the impact of the Academy Award on the public and legislative debate. The conclusion discusses the wider implications for understanding normative change.
Status cues and normative change
We argue that status cues induce an affective response that can facilitate (or inhibit) the adoption of new norms. Whereas existing constructivist accounts focus on the power of the better argument, our framework builds on insights from social psychology and recent debates on affective global politics to explain how cues about a country's relative standing can open possibilities for change.
Dominant models of normative change in International Relations are premised on persuasion and reasoned argumentation. Earlier norm scholarship in IR focused on the emergence, spread, and internalisation of standards of behaviour across borders.Footnote 12 A more recent wave examines the various processes through which norms are contested and changed as they diffuse.Footnote 13 Importantly, both early and more recent scholarship expects actors to be motivated by an inherent need for consistency: consistency between social norms and beliefs systems, and between norms and actions (both physical and communicative).Footnote 14 In this view, logically coherent and evidence-based arguments are more likely to convince others to accept norms or, at least, to act accordingly.
Norm entrepreneurs play a central role in this regard promoting norms by seeking to persuade others of their appropriateness.Footnote 15 They raise awareness and frame issues in ways that resonate with audiences. Studies find that norms framed in terms of legal equality or the protection of vulnerable populations from bodily harm have the power to persuade.Footnote 16 Norm entrepreneurs also use persuasion-based mechanisms to coax transgressive actors into compliance, for example, by pointing at inconsistencies between actors’ normative commitments and actions. Similarly, they can stigmatise those whose normative commitments or actions fail to live up to social expectations, triggering a sense of shame in targets and pressuring them to justify their actions or attitudes.Footnote 17 Of course, actors do not always become socialised into accepting a norm. They can pay lip service or strategically adhere to a norm without being convinced of its appropriateness.Footnote 18 However, actors who care about their reputation and the legitimacy of their claims may become ‘entrapped’ as they feel the need to be (perceived as) consistent and logically coherent.Footnote 19
Early norm research recognises that emotions and affect play some role in persuasion.Footnote 20 After all, social identities are affective attachments to groups, and many persuasion-based mechanisms, most notably shaming, rely on norm entrepreneurs’ ability to induce an emotional response in others. By the same token, ‘communicative action’, which informs many constructivist accounts of persuasion, relies on agents’ empathetic understanding of others’ perspectives.Footnote 21 Yet the norm literature has long treated affect and emotions as secondary, foregrounding instead agents’ drive for coherence between beliefs, norms, and social actions.Footnote 22
The literature frequently (but variably) draws on cognitive dissonance as an explanation of people's inherent motivation for consistency. Originally developed in psychology, the theory states that disagreement between cognitions – knowledge that individuals have about themselves, their actions, and their environment – creates discomfort that they will try to avoid or eliminate.Footnote 23 Norm research expects cognitive dissonance to motivate either behavioural or attitudinal adjustments, leading to norm complianceFootnote 24 or, eventually, internalisation.Footnote 25
Yet behavioural or attitudinal changes are not the only responses to cognitive dissonance. Social psychologists argue that people have a ‘psychological immune system’ that helps them to cope with threats to self-integrity.Footnote 26 Self-affirmation theory, for example, proposes that individuals can be resilient to dissonance in one domain when offered the possibility to assert their self-esteem in another. The textbook examples are smokers who respond to information about the health risks of their habit by reaffirming their identity as competent teachers or good parents.Footnote 27 During the debate on Chile's GIL, religious conservative who opposed the bill exalted their Christian identity when presented with counterattitudinal evidence (about the harm that unequal or lack of access to gender identity changes cause to trans children). Similar coping mechanisms also explain why shaming can be counterproductive as they may cause individuals who feel that their self-concept is being threatened to double down.Footnote 28 Affect, in other words, can both enable and inhibit normative change.
Research in cognitive and social psychology shows that people often process information in a manner that is consistent with their prior beliefs and attitudes. In some instances, individuals may be motivated to process arguments and evidence accurately; yet in others, they are driven by a desire to protect their positive self-concept.Footnote 29 Directional motivated reasoning occurs more commonly when issues are emotionally charged and connected to people's identities.Footnote 30 Because directional motivated reasoning leads to biased information processing, persuasion through argumentation and evidence becomes difficult (although not impossible).
Affect conditions how credible or persuasive people find arguments and other pieces of information.Footnote 31 This view is in line with a growing body of literature that explores the impact of emotions in global politics.Footnote 32 Studies find that emotionally charged discourse plays an important role in shaping how the public relates and ultimately responds to political events.Footnote 33 Emotions, in this sense, are not only individually felt but collectively constructed and experienced, depending on interactions with others and the particular social and political contexts in which they are embedded.Footnote 34 Narratives of national humiliation, for example, appeal to and mobilise collective emotions that lend themselves to more assertive or revisionist foreign policies to ‘regain a sense of collective efficacy and authority’.Footnote 35 Emotions acquire their social meaning not only through narratives. Visual, and other non-verbal forms of communication also induce affective responses.Footnote 36 Visual representations, William A. Callaghan argues, create ‘affective communities of sense’ that shape social relations, among other things, through inducing emotions such as pride, disgust, or shame.Footnote 37
Popular culture can create ‘synthetic experiences’ that change or reinforce preexisting beliefs, for example, about the nature of military threats.Footnote 38 Critical scholarship has long maintained that cultural artifacts constitute subjectivity and agency.Footnote 39 Television shows that portray cisgender same-sex couples as non-threatening may reflect changing attitudes towards homosexuality in society. However, as queer scholars note, they also perpetuate ‘homonormativity’, the assimilation of LGBTQ+ people into binary heteronormative norms.Footnote 40 At the same time, popular culture's affective impact can also be subversive. Dean Cooper-Cunningham, for instance, discusses the emergence of the Gay Clown Putin meme that LGBTQ+ rights advocates shared in response to Russia's gay propaganda law of 2013.Footnote 41 Popular culture frames issues in certain ways; and it is a site where meaning is constructed, and at times, contested through emotions and affect.
In Chile, trans rights advocates engaged in a long and arduous campaign for legal change. Initially a ‘niche’ topic that attracted little public interest, norm advocates raised awareness, arguing that a gender identity law was urgent to reduce harm in vulnerable populations. They provided concrete evidence and numerous testimonies that documented the hardship that trans people endured, often exposing themselves and their witnesses to humiliation. Advocates also emphasised the need to harmonise Chile's domestic legal framework with (inter-American) human rights law, citing legal precedents in neighbouring countries and the bill's coherence with the Yogyakarta Principles, a non-binding declaration on the application of human rights law to LGBTQ+ issues.
There is little doubt that norm advocates were successful in persuading some legislators to support the Gender Identity Law. However, it is equally clear that the debate triggered a conservative backlash.Footnote 42 As elaborated below, opponents became increasingly reluctant to accept counterattitudinal information, opting instead for delaying tactics purportedly justified by the need to improve the bill.
The international recognition that A Fantastic Woman received erupted into this debate. Although trans rights activists criticised the movie for its homonormative bias and inattention to questions of class and race, it became a common reference point that made the everyday discrimination of trans people intelligible to legislators and the wider public.Footnote 43 The movie's content reinforced the campaign message in support of normative change. For some, it also created a ‘synthetic experience’, which is evident in legislators’ references to Marina (the movies’ protagonist) during the legislative process.Footnote 44 However, the movie's impact cannot be separated from its international recognition. The Academy Award put the issue under the international spotlight, making the support for trans rights a matter of national pride that temporarily muted opposition to the law. The award served as a status cue that facilitated normative change.
Status cues, affect, and normative change
Status and related concepts such as esteem and prestige have attracted renewed attention from International Relations. Initially, this literature focused on status concerns as an aspect of great power rivalry and conflict. Since then, the debate has broadened beyond the concerns of great and aspiring powers to include small- and middle-sized states,Footnote 45 and the interconnection between status concerns and domestic political processes.Footnote 46
Status refers to actors’ social position based on estimations of honour and prestige.Footnote 47 Political actors care about the status of their state for both extrinsic and intrinsic reasons.Footnote 48 For one, status distinctions distribute resources unevenly in society.Footnote 49 Membership in exclusive clubs, such as the UN Security Council or informal country groupings like the G7 and G20, bestows high status in international politics and provides privileged access to decision-making as status groups monopolise economic and political advantages through ‘social closure’.Footnote 50 Status further matters because people who identify with a state gain self-esteem from its recognition (or lose self-esteem from misrecognition and stigmatisation).Footnote 51 High status, in this sense, is a symbolic resource that bolsters the legitimacy of actors and their political projects.
Social identity theory (SIT), which informs many discussions of status in IR, argues that individuals derive their self-esteem from membership in social categories and groups.Footnote 52 To maintain a positive self-concept, individuals will either identify as members of high-status groups or, collectively, pursue strategies that enhance the standing of their group. According to Henri Tajfel and John Turner, ‘social creativity’ occurs when low-status groups shift the dimension of comparison, refine an ostensibly negative trait as positive, or change the reference group altogether.Footnote 53 For example, Gay Pride parades, which commemorate the resistance against police brutality at New York's Stonewall Inn in 1969, turn the negative association of homosexuality with Bohemian lifestyles into a source of pride. Social creativity can also lead to out-group discrimination within the LGBTQ+ community, as many gay movements, including in Chile, attempted to dissociate themselves from groups that were deemed of lower status, including lesbian, bisexual, and trans people.Footnote 54 By contrast, ‘social competition’ involves a more confrontational approach whereby low-status groups compete on a salient and immutable dimension. SIT suggests status-seeking is not necessarily a zero-sum game that leads to conflict as actors can compete for status on different dimensions if they able to do so.Footnote 55
Status is relational and perceptual: it depends on comparisons with salient reference groups and collectively held beliefs.Footnote 56 Status is acquired through social recognition. Actors can communicate their aspired status through investment in culturally contingent status symbols. The organisation of global sporting events or the procurement of expensive weapons systems can be forms of ‘conspicuous consumption’, whereby ostentatious spending serves as a signal of a country's wealth and position.Footnote 57 Importantly, status recognition cannot be directly observed but relies on cues. Status cues provide information about actors’ competence or excellence on a socially valued dimension. Policy advocates take advantage of this dynamic through country rankings that compare states’ performance on indicators, such as corruption perception or economic openness. By constructing an artificial ‘pecking order’ that classifies states on a hierarchical scale, rankings provide cues that reward the political projects of some while putting pressure on others to reform.Footnote 58 Country rankings (and similar instruments) do so in part because they provide a seemingly objective criteria for comparison, but they also work through the politics of affect as they evoke feelings of pride or shame in target audiences.Footnote 59
We argue that cues about a states’ relative standing can induce affects that facilitate (or inhibit) normative change. What counts as a status cue depends on social values, and societies may value different cues differently. As Jonathan Mercer points out, while international prestige is an ‘illusion’ that exists only in the minds of people as an objective evaluative property, it nevertheless influences individuals’ political actions.Footnote 60 Because people tend to strive for a positive self-concept, and because they derive an important part of their self-esteem from group membership, they tend to focus on dimensions on which their group perform well: status cues associated with great power status may hold more sway among people who identify with great powers, whereas winning an international ice hockey competition may be more salient in societies that perform well in ice hockey.
Status cues depend on social conventions. They are not only context-specific, but their salience also varies across time.Footnote 61 Status cues may become relevant only for a short period of time. The political effect of consistently poor performance on a specific country ranking is likely to be different from a sudden drop or improvement on the same indictor. Paul Beaumont, for example, shows that the comparatively low position that Norway achieved on the first PISA rankings, which compare educational attainment across countries, legitimised policy reform against domestic opposition.Footnote 62 In this sense, status cues can open ‘windows of opportunity’ that allow for domestic political change.Footnote 63
Status salience and LGBTQ+ rights in Chile
Gender and sexual minority rights have been hotly contested in Chile in recent decades. Although the return of democracy brought human rights to the forefront of public debate, LGBTQ+ issues were largely sidelined as ‘moral conservatism prevailed’ for much of the 1990s.Footnote 64 For one, Chilean democracy inherited a constitution whose guiding principles are economically neoliberal while socially conservative. The constitution of 1980 reflects the interests of the political forces that supported the Pinochet regime, including the armed forces, pro-market libertarians, and Catholic conservatives. Despite the gradual elimination of the ‘authoritarian enclaves’ in Chile's political system (such as designated senators for life and an electoral system that favoured authoritarian successor parties), the proponents of the status quo retain important veto powers.Footnote 65
For another, the Concertación, the coalition of left and centre-left parties that led the transition to democracy, was unwilling to break with the prevailing mores of Chilean society. As in other Latin American countries, homophobic and transphobic discourse has historically been pervasive among Chile's left, and the newly elected authorities shunned the association with gender or sexual minorities.Footnote 66
Unlike in neighbouring Argentina, LGBTQ+ activism institutionalised only gradually.Footnote 67 The dictatorship harshly repressed political dissidents; and while the Pinochet regime did not specifically target queer people, it viewed those who did not adhere to cis-heteronormative ideals with suspicion.Footnote 68 Members of LGBTQ+ communities were persistently exposed to state violence and abuse, especially when also politically active.Footnote 69 The country's penal code, which predates authoritarian rule, criminalised male homosexual intercourse (Article 365) and any act that ‘offends modesty or good manners’ (Article 373). It served for a long time as a basis for police harassment that disproportionately affected homosexual men and transwomen.Footnote 70 The Homosexual Liberation Movement (MOVILH) was created in 1991 to campaign for the repeal of Article 365. Since then, the organisation (and its successor) has claimed a hegemonic role in debates over LGBTQ+ issues, often leading to tensions with other organisations that represent women or non-binary people, including the three main trans advocacy groups: TravesChile, Organizing Trans Diversities (OTD), and the Amanda Jofré Sex Workers’ Union.Footnote 71
Norm advocates successfully employed persuasion to advance LGBTQ+ rights. During the transition to democracy, activists pointed out the incoherence between the left's human rights discourse and its disregard for gender and sexual minorities. President Aylwin, who succeeded Pinochet in 1990, faced an embarrassing incident during a state visit to Europe when a Danish journalist confronted him about the treatment of homosexuals in his country, upon which Aylwin merely responded that there was no discrimination, but that Chilean society would not look upon homosexuality with sympathy. Apparently, in the president's view, LGBTQ+ rights did not belong in the same category as human rights.Footnote 72
Óscar Contardo argues that the Concertación was eager to profile Chile as a democratic and liberal state.Footnote 73 Others agree that international ‘insertion’ has been a foreign policy priority since the 1990s.Footnote 74 The strengthening of Chile's participation in the international human rights regime (and international fora, more generally) allowed democrats to lock in policy choices; it also helped position the country as a multilateral broker.Footnote 75 Status anxiety gave policy advocates leverage over the agenda and strengthened their ability to push for normative change.
The liberal rhetoric also ‘entrapped’ the erstwhile defenders of the status quo. Whereas conservatives initially rejected the decriminalisation of sodomy, this position became untenable in the late 1990s. As Hernán Larraín, a prominent leader of the right-wing Independent Democratic Union (UDI) explained: ‘we could oppose them [gay rights activists] in the early 1990s, but not by the end of the decade …we were cultivating a positive international image, especially with European officials.’Footnote 76 In other instances, concerns over Chile's international standing aided in defending the status quo. The neoliberal economic model enshrined in the 1980 constitution became externally validated as Chile excelled on international benchmarks and foreign observers celebrated the ‘Chilean miracle’ (Milton Friedman). This reinforced the view that economic openness and the negotiation of free trade agreements was a matter of national interest exempt from partisan politics and public scrutiny. For many years, politicians celebrated Chile as a champion of free trade, cultivating the image of an ‘oasis’ of prosperity and macroeconomic stability in an otherwise volatile region.Footnote 77
Civil society groups successfully advocated for the revision of many conservative laws. The Civil Code legally discriminated against children born outside of wedlock until 1998. Similarly, divorce was only legalised in 2004 – Chile was one of the last countries in the world to do so. Abortion was illegal without exception until 2017. It has since been decriminalised in only limited cases.
Civil society pressure played an important role in putting LGBTQ+ rights on the agenda. Sodomy, the initial focal point of LGBTQ+ rights activism, was finally decriminalised in 1999. However, while there used to be some ambiguity on whether the original Article 365 extended to other forms of same-sex intercourse, the revised Penal Code explicitly established a different age of consent for all homosexual acts, leading to accusations that MOVILH worked against the interests of other gender and sexual dissidents.Footnote 78 The article was finally repealed in 2022.
In February 2012, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) reviewed a ruling of the Chilean Supreme Court that had awarded custody of her children to the husband of Karen Atala Riffo because of her homosexuality. It was the first IACHR ruling in favour of LGBTQ+ rights. The same year, the homophobic murder of Daniel Zamudio sparked public indignation. Zamudio became a symbol of the LGBTQ+ rights movement. A law was passed the same year (the ‘Zamudio Law’) prohibiting arbitrary discrimination and penalising crimes motivated by victims’ sexual orientation and gender identity. Civil unions between same-sex couples were recognised in 2015. Same-sex marriage has been legal in Chile since 2022.
Persistent advocacy at the domestic and international levels led to the expansion of LGBTQ+ rights across Latin America, and this despite often fierce and increasingly organised backlash.Footnote 79 Chile's advocacy groups were less unified than their regional peers. They also lacked the political allies that would have allowed them to be heard and participate in policymaking more directly, contributing to a sense that the country was held ‘hostage to a conservative elite’.Footnote 80 Yet decisionmakers’ status anxiety increased the political systems’ responsiveness to their concerns.
Trans rights occupied a marginal place in these debates.Footnote 81 MOVILH, Chile's most visible LGBTQ+ group, has long been ambiguous if not outright hostile towards trans and non-binary communities. Trans advocacy in turn has focused on individuals’ right to change their name and gender with the Civil Registry – the state bureaucracy that issues identification documents, which Chileans are required to present for even the ‘most menial tasks’ and essential for accessing education, employment, and health services.Footnote 82 After several failed attempts, a gender identity bill entered Congress in 2013. Although conservative legislators and religious groups opposed the initiative, it was backed by a broad political coalition and civil society organisations that campaigned for legal change.
However, despite this support, it took five years to pass into law – paradoxically, under the conservative government of Sebastian Piñera in 2018. There is evidence of norm diffusion, especially within Latin America, where the number of similar laws increased from one in 2012 (Argentina, the world's first) to nine by 2020.Footnote 83 Advocacy groups shared similar rhetorical frames centred on the discriminatory treatment of trans people and their often atrocious living conditions in Latin American societies.Footnote 84 In the Chilean case, they also made a strong connection with the country's ‘incomplete transition’, which resonated with wider social demands.Footnote 85
Despite initial bipartisan support, opposition became increasingly entrenched. The possibility that the GIL would allow minors to change their legal gender markers mobilised conservative groups, who engaged in a coordinated campaign aimed at pathologising trans people and arguing that the bill's ‘gender ideology’ would put children at risk. However, this values-based opposition weakened in the wake of the Academy Awards. According to Costanza Valdés, the international recognition of A Fantastic Woman swiftly changed the terms of the national debate.Footnote 86 The movie's international success, Baird Campbell similarly notes, ‘threw open the floodgates’ for discussing trans rights.Footnote 87 Franco Fuica, who led OTD's efforts in support of the law, concurs: the Academy Award was a key moment that facilitated the approval of the law. Whereas the campaign previously centred on preventing harm in vulnerable populations, the award created political pressure that was impossible for the government to ignore.Footnote 88 The source of this pressure had less to do with the content of the movie then the fact that the award induced a sense of pride. It acted as a status cue that facilitated normative change.
How the Academy Awards facilitated Chile's gender identity law
Before the approval for the GIL in 2018, trans people had access to name and gender changes only through litigation. Because Chilean law requires legal names to correspond to individuals’ registral sex, petitioners could argue that a change was necessary for trans people to prevent ‘moral harm’.Footnote 89 However, the process was costly and largely inaccessible to the majority of the trans population. Furthermore, litigants had to provide evidence of their ‘gender dysphoria’, and judges could require psychological or medical examinations, subjecting petitioners to a humiliating process whose outcome was uncertain. Two unsuccessful motions for a gender identity law had been presented in 2008 and 2010. A third and ultimately successful bill was introduced in 2013 with the support of OTD and Fundación Iguales.Footnote 90 In January 2014, the Chilean Senate unanimously approved the motion to legislate. Yet it took over five years for the bill to pass into law.
Norm advocates argued that a new law was urgent to prevent harm and to end the pathologisation of trans people as required by (inter-American) human rights law. From the outset, conservatives agreed that inconsistencies in civil registry records needed rectification. However, they vehemently rejected the idea that gender marker changes should be open to minors. Anticipating opposition, the bill was intentionally drafted to bypass this objection with the tacit understanding that access would be broadened through ‘amendatory observations’ (indicaciones) at the committee stage.Footnote 91
Because legislators had little knowledge of the situation of the trans people in the country, civil society organisations extensively lobbied the Senate, contributing evidence and testimonies during several rounds of committee hearings, where they often faced hostility and humiliation.Footnote 92 Advocates focused on demonstrating the physical and psychological harm that the current regime inflicted upon the trans community and children, in particular. They recurrently referred to a report of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), which found the life expectancy of transwomen in the Americas not to exceed 35 years.Footnote 93 They also cited an OTD survey that documented the high suicide risk of trans people below the age of 18 in Chile.Footnote 94
The advocacy campaign won over some sceptics. José Antonio Ossandón from the centre-right Renovación Nacional (RN) noted that, ‘with each day’ he would become more convinced of the bill's importance. Yet he also stressed that this insight would not change his belief in parents’ right to raise their children as they seem fit.Footnote 95 Overall, the inclusion of minors provoked the anticipated response from right-wing legislators.Footnote 96 Led by Jacqueline van Rysselberghe (UDI), a trained psychiatrist (and later UDI president), detractors questioned the bill's constitutionality, opting for delaying tactics and other ways to dilute it.Footnote 97 Van Rysselberghe also led the charge in insisting that over 80 per cent of childhood gender dysphoria would correct itself before adulthood.Footnote 98 After years in committee limbo (where over three hundred amendments were discussed), senators finally passed the bill in 2017. However, they also rejected the inclusion of minors in a separate vote after which it moved to the Chamber of Deputies for review and approval.
The debate in the lower house followed a similar script. The left-wing government of Michelle Bachelet (2014–18) supported the initiative as part of its social and civil rights agenda, reintroducing the rights of minors to gender marker changes through a revised bill. The move riled up critics who accused the other side of dishonesty. Although references to ‘gender ideology’ were rare at first, they became more common during what turned into an acrimonious debate.Footnote 99 Catholic and evangelical groups increasingly mobilised and opposed the bill on values-based grounds.Footnote 100
The drawn-out legislative process frustrated trans rights advocates, who criticised the Bachelet government's lack of support and failure to consider the views of the trans people on the matter.Footnote 101 They were also disappointed that the executive abandoned the Yogyakarta principles, opting instead for a binary definition of gender that required trans people to register as either woman or man.Footnote 102 Most importantly, though, the slow progress raised fears that conservatives would bury the initiative after the 2017 elections. This was a legitimate concern as the right and centre-right parties that supported Sebastián Piñera's (RN) presidential bid agreed to prevent the law from passing. Piñera himself criticised the GIL during his campaign, adopting sceptics’ talking points about the self-corrective nature of ‘gender dysphoria’.Footnote 103 Piñera's views on the matter remained unchanged after winning the run-off vote held in December 2017. In fact, some even noted that he may shift further to the right after his coalition partners affirmed their intention to stop the law.Footnote 104 Yet the newly elected government abruptly changed its position after A Fantastic Woman won the Academy Award.
A Fantastic Woman
Piñera governed Chile between 2010 and 2014. He returned to the presidency on 11 March 2018, for a second, non-consecutive term. International news dominated the agenda during the days leading up to the change in government. A Fantastic Woman, directed by Sebastián Lelio, won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film on 4 March 2018.
This was not the first time that Hollywood played a role in domestic contestations over Chile's place among liberal democratic states. Prominent movie actors, including ‘Superman’ Christopher Reeve, appeared in the 1988 campaign to restore democracy to Chile. The historical drama No, which focuses on the campaign to remove Pinochet from power through a plebiscite, was nominated for an Academy Award in 2012. Finally, Bear Story, an animated movie directed by Gabriel Osorio Vargas that deals with political exile, won the award for the best short film in 2016. However, these episodes addressed an ‘old’ partisan issue evolving the legacy of authoritarian rule. By contrast, A Fantastic Woman directly intervened in a salient domestic debate on trans rights.
The movie had already drawn acclaim during the 2017 festival circuit. Yet the public's interest in and repones to the film only peaked in the aftermath of the Academy Award. Following the nomination in January 2018, Daniela Vega, who played the leading role, quickly emerged as a figurehead of the trans movement, using her prominence to advocate for the GIL. The actress openly criticised conservatives for stalling the legislation in an interview that was widely reproduced in Chilean media:
Conservatism is very dangerous for the development of our human rights. Economic growth is no guarantee that Chile will advance on other issues: education, health, social insurance, same-sex marriage … I leave Chile to represent my country with a masculine name in my passport and that brings me problems every day, every time I travel.Footnote 105
Vega's criticism points at the contradiction between recognition of the movie as a source of national pride, her role as Chile's representative at the international stage, and the ensuing discrimination of trans people in the country. Noteworthily, she also connects the question of gender and sexual minority rights with the continuation of the development model imposed during authoritarian rule. The international attention that she received help amplifying her critique and provided her position with credibility and prestige.
The award ‘reignited’ debate over trans rights in the country.Footnote 106 Figure 1 shows the striking surge in public interest following the Academy Awards nomination in January 2018, as evident in Chilean newspaper coverage and Internet searches. Commenting on a poll that found that 67 per cent of Chileans supported the law in the aftermath of the Oscars ceremony, Juan Enrique Pi, the executive director of Iguales argued that the Chileans widely supported the initiative ‘to end the discrimination that trans people live with every day, and that is reflected so well in A Fantastic Woman’.Footnote 107
Chilean politicians were also quick to associate the Academy Award with the situation of trans people in the country. As outgoing president Michelle Bachelet observed via Twitter: ‘The award, which fills us with pride, not only recognises a film of great quality, but a history of respect for diversity that does us good as a country.’Footnote 108 Back in Chile, Bachelet received the film crew in the president palace, providing Vega with yet another opportunity to reiterate her criticism.Footnote 109 Bachelet also used her urgency powers to expedite the legislative process on her last days in office, thereby forcing the incoming conservative government to take a stand.Footnote 110
To much surprise, her successor, Sebastián Piñera, decided to join the bandwagon. As he tweeted on 4 March:
Tonight Chilean cinema has touched the stars. Go Chile [Grande Chile] and a big hug, with pride and emotion, to the whole team of #UnaMujerFantástica, the best foreign film in the #Oscars 2018.Footnote 111
Although Piñera's tweet did not explicitly mention Vega or the GIL, the tone is emotionally charged and sharply contrasts with his earlier statements during the presidential campaign. For instance, he questioned the bill in a television debate, arguing that ‘unlike a shirt’ gender should not be something that can be changed from one day to another; he further rejected the idea that minors should be included in the law, echoing yet again the sceptics’ claim about the prevalence of detransitions.Footnote 112
The day after the Oscars, speaking on behalf of the incoming administration, Gonzalo Blumel recognised the need to legislate, arguing that the movie showed the need for a cultural change, further signalling the policy shift in the incoming government.Footnote 113 Blumel's statements irritated the Chile Vamos coalition: party leaders had agreed to reject the bill and their legislators voted against it in Congress (although not unanimously); the evident change in the aftermath of the Academy Award caused considerable friction within the bloc, even threatening to ‘dynamite’ the coalition before taking office.Footnote 114 Piñera, in turn, appointed long-time defender of the Pinochet regime, Hernán Larraín (UDI) Minister of Justice and Human Rights, who, together with undersecretary Lorena Recabarren (RN), was tasked with aiding the passing of the bill. Incidentally, two of Larraín's sons also happened to be the producers of A Fantastic Woman, adding yet another emotional layer to the events. (Larraín, who supported the decriminalisation of sodomy to bolster Chile's liberal democratic credentials in the 1990s denied having taken a picture of himself with the award.)Footnote 115
The government was quick to reject accusations of incoherence. Press secretary Cecilia Pérez argued that her coalition had long held the conviction that change was necessary. Rather than pressing the government to act, the award was a ‘source of pride’.Footnote 116 In the following days, Piñera reiterated his support for the law so that ‘cases like Daniela [Vega]’ could change their name with the Civil Registry and be accepted by society.Footnote 117 Piñera even compared the situation to that after the powerful earthquake that shook Chile during his first government (2010–14) and which, he added, had not been on the campaign agenda either.Footnote 118
Conservative legislators followed suit, stating that they would support the initiative in principle under the condition that the ‘bad law’ would be substantively revised. José Antonio Kast accused the right of insincerity and having surrendered to the left in a polemical op-ed, although he argued that trans people should not be discriminated against, suggesting a separate register for gender identity instead.Footnote 119 Santiago's Archbishop, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati initially doubled down, arguing that ‘the fundamental issue is not simply age … Just because I give a cat a dog's name, it will not become a dog.’Footnote 120 However, such views had become a lost cause, as even the conservative government now criticised Ezzati. Chile made increasing progress towards greater inclusiveness, Cecilia Pérez noted, which required a public debate ‘with respect and without prejudice or disqualification’.Footnote 121 In a rather atypical move, the head of the Catholic Church in Chile was pressed to apologise. Long-time sceptic van Rysselberghe, in turn, tried to deflect: ‘besides the Oscar’, Piñera was elected to address the more pressing concerns, including public security, health care, and education reform.Footnote 122 Van Rysselberghe became the figurehead of a rapidly dwindling number of conservative hold-outs, as illustrated by the cover of the satire magazine The Clinic (8 March 2018), which showed the Senator in a symbolic scene from the movie where Marina stands strong against opposing winds, titled ‘A Fanatic Woman’. Van Rysselberghe responded with an interview in the same magazine (entitled ‘The electroshock is like me: it gets bad press but is efficient’), arguing that just because opposing the law was now a lost cause does not mean that she has to approve it.Footnote 123 The Academy Award was perceived as a source of national pride, triggering an affective response that led the erstwhile detractors of the law to change their position or drop their opposition.
Only two days after the Oscars, the Chilean Senate unanimously decided to send the bill to a joint committee to resolve the remaining differences. As Valdés notes, this move was unusual as the established procedure would have required another report from the Senate's Human Rights Committee where it was initially discussed. In her view, this demonstrates the impact that the award had on the debate.Footnote 124 Daniela Vega and the movie also became recurrent reference points during the committee hearings.Footnote 125 Deputy Karol Cariola Oliva (Communist Party) even dedicated her final vote to the advocates who fought for normative change and Vega, ‘the great Chilean actress who gave an Oscar to this country’.Footnote 126
The law was approved on 4 September 2018 after over five years of deliberation (and with four votes from centre-rights senators; the inclusion of minors of 14 years was blocked). The government's sudden shift was evident. Centre-left politicians and NGOs called out the government for its hypocrisy. As Juan Enrique Pi remarked, ‘It would be very bizarre [muy mezquino] to celebrate the artistic triumph of A Fantastic Woman without taking charge of the reality it portrays. As a society we are indebted to trans people.’Footnote 127 Advocates recognised the impact that the movie had on the debate, arguing that without the support the award created for their cause, the approval of the GIL would have been uncertain, and the inclusion of minors almost certainly impossible.Footnote 128 But trans activists also criticised the ‘pink washing’ of the trans rights agenda and other LGBTQ+ organisations including MOVILH and Iguales for taking credit for their efforts in the aftermath of the Oscars.Footnote 129 Nor was it clear whether the government was truly committed to the cause, as it later introduced restrictive administrative procedures to limit access to gender marker changes for minors.Footnote 130 As Campbell concludes, ‘what might have been a moment of reflection for a country struggling to come to terms with the situation of its trans population, instead became a moment to celebrate a victory for all Chileans, and for the country's image as a whole, on the backs of trans people who continued to be excluded from full citizenship.’Footnote 131
Conclusion
The international recognition of A Fantastic Woman facilitated the approval of the GIL in 2018. Trans rights advocates had lobbied for a law that guaranteed access to gender marker changes for many years. They played an important role in raising awareness about the hardship of trans people and they successfully framed the issue as part of the country's incomplete transition to democracy that resonated with social demands for change. Throughout the protracted and often acrimonious debate, civil society organisations provided scientific evidence and personal testimonies that documented the harm that the status quo inflicted on a vulnerable population, especially trans children. In principle, conservatives agreed that legal change was necessary. However, they disputed whether gender identity constituted a human right and rejected its application to individuals below the age of 18. Although trans activists persuaded some legislators, others became more intransigent in their views, opposing the law on normative grounds. Because the Chilean political system provided opponents with veto powers to defend the status quo, these sceptics were able to protract the legislative process for over five years. By the time of the 2017 elections, it was by no means a foregone conclusion that the law would pass.
Yet the success of A Fantastic Woman at the Academy Awards radically changed the terms of the debate in early 2018. It created public interest in the situation of trans people, both domestically and abroad, and provided a focal point for discussing trans rights in Chile. Daniela Vega emerged as a powerful voice in this debate, featuring among Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2018 (the accompanying note was written by former president Bachelet who became United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights later that year).Footnote 132 In this sense, an external status cue legitimised a political cause. More decisively, though, the Oscar temporarily turned support for trans rights into a matter of national pride. It served as a cue about Chile's international reputation and prestige; the ensuing affective response was crucial in garnering support for the law across the political spectrum – even if for only a short period of time.
The case of Chile GIL demonstrates how status cues create opportunities for normative change. It is clear that the international recognition of a Chilean movie induced an emotional state in Chilean society. However, it is less clear whether conservatives, including the members of the Piñera government, eventually supported the law because of the sense of pride it instilled in themselves, or because they acted opportunistically, seeking to benefit from the collective sentiment of national pride. Although it is hard to establish decision-makers’ true motivations ex post facto, it is clear that the Piñera government altered its course in response to the award, and against opposition from within its own ranks. Although the Oscar did not cause the GIL, it facilitated its approval in its current form.
The study contributes to the recent norm research that analyses the contestation and transformation of norms. In recent years, the election of right-wing populist who gained power on post-truth platforms has sparked interested in ‘motivated reasoning’ and other biased forms of information processing. The case of Chile's GIL illustrates the ambiguous effects of such psychological defence mechanism. On the one hand, emotionally charged debates make evidence-based and reasoned debate more difficult; for another, the politics of affect may also facilitate change by inducing a sense of pride or shame in audiences.
International Relations research continues to explore the contestation of national roles and the domestic perception of states’ international standing, but more work is needed. Accounts that connect work on status, roles, norms, and beliefs could draw on theoretical advances in each to support the others. Although the literature agree that status is perceptual, most accounts assume the existence of a status order that neatly rank states according on social estimations of honour and prestige. As Mercer points out, actors tend to conflate their sense of pride with national prestige and discount the prestige of others, rendering prestige in his view an illusion.Footnote 133 Future research should pay greater attention to way in which status cues are perceived and contested domestically, how they affect national role conceptions, and what opportunities they provide entrepreneurs to advance domestic change.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to the editors of Review of International Studies and three anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments and suggestions. A previous version of this article was presented at the 2021 European Workshops in International Studies (EWIS); we thank Paul Beaumont, Pål Røren, and the other participants for their critical comments. We also thank Camila Henzi Duarte and María Belén Lagos Cordero for research assistance, and Consuelo Thiers and Geoffrey Maguire for their close reading of an earlier draft.