World League for Sexual Reform


The World League for Sexual Reform was a League for coordinating policy reforms related to greater openness around sex. The organization advocated a ten-point platform which included:
  1. Economic, political, and sexual equality of men and women
  2. Secularization and reform of laws on marriage and divorce
  3. Birth control to make birth voluntary and responsible
  4. Eugenic birth selection
  5. Protection of unmarried mothers and "illegitimate children"
  6. Rational understanding of intersex people and homosexuals.
  7. Comprehensive sex education
  8. Reforms to eliminate the dangers of prostitution
  9. Treating sexual abnormalities medically, rather than "as crimes, vices or sins"
  10. Legalization of sexual acts between consenting adults, while criminalizing sexual acts without consent, or acts upon minors and the mentally disabled. Distinguishing crime from vice.
In 1921 Magnus Hirschfeld organised the First Congress for Sexual Reform, which led to the formation of the League. Ralf Dose has written an overview of the League. Congresses were held in Copenhagen, London, Vienna, and Brno. Congress speakers included: Magnus Hirschfeld, Norman Haire, Vera Brittain, Dora Russell, Charles Vickery Drysdale, Stella Browne, Ernst Gräfenberg, Marie Stopes, M. D. Eder, Laurence Housman, George Ives, Eden Paul, Felix Abraham, Bernard Shaw, Bertrand Russell, Ethel Mannin, Harry Benjamin, Peter Schmidt, William J. Robinson and Jack Flügel, a Freudian psychologist who assisted Norman Haire and Dora Russell organize the Congress and also led the Men's Dress Reform Party. Although not a speaker, Albert Einstein was in contact with the Congress.
In 1928 Francis Turville-Petre, British archaeologist and friend of Christopher Isherwood, stayed at Hirschfeld's Institute of Sexual Research in Weimar Berlin. Whilst based in Berlin, Turville-Petre was an active member of the Scientific Humanitarian Committee, which campaigned for gay legal reform and tolerance, and attended the Second Congress in Copenhagen in 1928.
In 1929 Magnus Hirschfeld presided over the third international congress held at Wigmore Hall, London. Harley Street sexologist, Norman Haire as secretary and Dora Russell as treasurer, jointly organized the event. Magnus Hirschfeld's speech praised British scientists as "distinguished pioneers in eugenics". A number of British feminists attended the 1929 conference, including Naomi Mitchison, Dora Russell, Janet Chance, a pioneer of abortion-law reform, Vera Brittain, a writer and pacifist and Stella Browne.
In 1932, the fourth international conference of the WLSR was organized and hosted by Hugo Iltis in Brno. Plans for a fifth conference in Moscow were scrubbed because of the political stresses caused by the growing power of Hitler and Stalin.
Many of the WLSR's books and records were destroyed by the Nazis during a raid in Berlin on the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft in May 1933.