Great list, thanks!
Quick comment on conversion-therapy bans. The laws in New Zealand and Canada have been praised as being particularly strong and loophole free, with Roman Catholic leaders in those nations seeming to agree, loudly complaining the laws will criminalize Church counseling designed to reduce or eliminate "unwanted same-sex attraction."
LGBTQ advocates have been happy to inform those leaders that that's what the laws are supposed to do. Mission accomplished.
French LGBTQ advocates have warned, on the other hand, that religious exceptions to the conversion therapy ban won by the Church in France render the law there toothless where it matters the most.
Conversion therapy is rarely or never practiced in France by licensed medical professionals. The people actually practicing it tend to be Catholic nuns and priests using combinations of psychological counseling techniques and spiritual practices that the Church rather jaw-droppingly claims is not conversion therapy, kind of in the same way Donald Trump claims obvious truths are not true. Say it loudly and frequently enough, and lots of people will believe you.
In any case, the New Zealand and Canadian laws criminalize the Church's practices. The French law gives the Church an out.
What this means on the ground in France in terms of the number of people, mostly adolescents, subjected to conversion therapy is that nothing much will change.