The Paralympic Games are underway and the Afghan flag takes importance 3:08
(CNN) -
At least 30 athletes competing in the Tokyo Paralympic Games identify as part of the LGBTQ community, a new record for LGBTQ representation at the Paralympic Games, according to one tally.
That's more than double the number of athletes who publicly identified as LGBTQ at the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games, according to SB Nation's Outsports blog, which ran a similar count of LGBTQ participants for the Summer Olympics.
Ex-Olympians helped the blog compile the list of LGBTQ athletes competing this month in Tokyo.
This year's competitors include Asya Miller, US gold medalist in goalball, a sport for athletes with visual impairments;
wheelchair basketball players Laurie Williams and Robyn Love of Team Great Britain;
and Edênia Garcia, Brazilian swimmer with four gold medals.
Asya Miller is a Paralympic Games veteran who has won gold in goalball.
The Paralympic Games began this week in Tokyo, with more than 4,400 athletes competing.
At both the Paralympic and Olympic Games there has been an increase in the number of LGBTQ athletes this year, according to Outsports.
The Summer Olympics in Tokyo featured at least 168 LGBTQ athletes, according to the blog's count.
Some of them, like British diver Tom Daley, Canadian soccer star Quinn and Brittney Griner of the US women's basketball team, won gold medals.
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But researchers studying LGBTQ representation in sport previously told CNN that the number of LGBTQ Olympians should have been higher.
Less than 2% of the 11,000 Olympians who competed this year identified as LGBTQ, according to the Outsports tally.
This underrepresentation may be due to a sports culture that still does not embrace transgender and queer athletes, according to Katie Schweighofer, an adjunct professor at Dicksinson College who studies inclusion in sports.
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Paralympians who identify as LGBTQ continue to grapple with negative attitudes towards queer and trans people.
In a blog post for the International Paralympic Committee, Brazilian swimmer Garcia said she "had to protect herself from a repertoire of jokes" while training.
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"Being a lesbian and disabled is a double challenge, as you carry the stigma of being invisible," Garcia said on the blog.
But competing in front of an international audience can also inspire change.
Lee Pearson, the dressage champion and team Great Britain's first gay Paralympic gold medalist, was chosen as his team's flag bearer in Rio in 2016. He was moved by the honor, he told the BBC in February.
Great Britain's para-equestrian dressage athlete Lee Pearson with his horse Gentleman.
"It was not about me, but about the message that we sent to other countries," he said.
"I hope it has sent a message to other nations in which diverse sexuality is oppressed and still not accepted, and in which sometimes you can even be sentenced to death."
Williams and Love from Team Great Britain have been teammates since 2015 and got engaged in 2020. Competing together in the Paralympic Games "has strengthened [their] relationship," Love wrote in an Instagram post in July.
Williams and Love will compete in women's wheelchair basketball beginning Wednesday.
In an interview last year, Love said she hoped to inspire young people to publicly acknowledge their sexual orientation not by doing "extreme things" but by being herself, although winning a gold medal probably wouldn't hurt either.
LGBT Community Paralympic Games