Queer is Here? Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Histories and Public Culture
In: History workshop journal: HWJ, Band 62, Heft 1, S. 253-263
ISSN: 1477-4569
In: History workshop journal: HWJ, Band 62, Heft 1, S. 253-263
ISSN: 1477-4569
In: Critical Criminological Perspectives
Chapter 1: Framework for Viewing Transgender Victimological Experiences in Global Criminal Processing Systems -- Chapter 2: Understanding Cultural Policing and Segregation of LGBTQ+ Communities in Poland -- Chapter 3: Exclusion and ignorance: international legal recognition and criminalisation responses to transgender communities in the context of political economy -- Chapter 4: TTransgender and gender non-conforming young people and the school-to-prison pipeline: Too crucial to ignore -- Chapter 5: Policing Transgender People -- Chapter 6: US Transgender Homicides (2013-2020): Exploring Homicide Characteristics and Police Disclosure During Criminal Investigations -- Chapter 7: Disorder in the Court: Transgender Folx Experiences of Criminal Legal Practitioner Failings -- Chapter 8: "Never let anyone say that a good fight for the fight for good wasn't a good fight indeed": The enactment of agency through military metaphor by one Australian incarcerated transgender woman -- Chapter 9: Concluding Thoughts and Future Directions.
In: Kang, Dredge Byung'chu 2014 Idols of Development: Transnational Transgender Performance in Thai K-Pop Cover Dance. Theme issue, "Trans* Cultural Production," Transgender Studies Quarterly 1(4): 559-571.
SSRN
In: SUNY series in queer politics and cultures
In: SUNY Series in Queer Politics and Cultures Ser.
Intro -- Contents -- List of Tables and Figures -- Preface -- 1 Introduction: Organizing for Transgender Rights in the United States -- The Rise of Transgender Rights Advocacy -- Overview of Major Findings -- A Few Words about the Data and My Approach -- How Transgender Rights Interest Groups Mobilized -- Definitions and Terms -- Transgender -- Transgender Rights Interest Group -- Transgender Rights Social Movement -- Interest-Group Formation -- Outline of the Book -- 2 A Brief History of Transgender Rights Organizing in the United States -- The Early Days of Transgender Organizing -- The Stirrings of a Movement -- Stonewall -- Organizing Immediately after Stonewall: Real but Limited -- The Rift -- The Stonewall Legacy: A Dream Deferred -- The 1970s and 1980s: "The Contemporary Nadir" -- The 1990s: Transgender Organizing Comes of Age -- The Early and Mid-1990s -- The Late 1990s and early 2000s -- 2000 and Beyond -- Nationally Active Transgender Interest Groups Today -- State and Local Transgender Rights Advocacy Today -- Summary and Conclusion -- 3 The Crucial Role of Grievances and Interactions -- Pluralism: Threats, Grievances, Disturbances, and Group Formation -- Reasons and Motives: Pluralism and Grievances and Connections -- There Are Always Grievances and Threats -- The Role of Disturbances -- Pluralism and Threats: The Role of Interaction -- When Grievances and Threats Meet Interaction -- Other Organizations -- Conferences -- The Internet -- Conclusion: Do Threats, Disturbances, and Grievances Matter? -- 4 Interactions, Learning, and Connections -- Theory: Interactions, Cross-Movement Effects, and Spillover Effects -- What Interactions Do -- Interactions Raise Awareness -- Interactions within Existing Lgb and Lgbt Groups -- Interactions in other Transgender Groups -- Interactions in Women's Rights and Feminist Groups.
In: Cultural studies - critical methodologies, Band 16, Heft 4, S. 351-360
ISSN: 1552-356X
Not long ago, clutched in colonial laws deployed to regulate dissident genders, the Hong Kong courts had never recognized the transgender person as a legitimate legal personality. Alongside powerful cultural transphobia that casts doubts on the corporeal authenticity of gender in post-operative transgender subjects, the laws held desperately onto the anachronistic and heterosexualized matrimonial framework that denies transgender subjects of their marriage rights—via the vastly productive hegemonic Judeo–Christian dogma of "one man and one woman" in marriage laws. All this was about to change because the disruptive pulse of cosmopolitan marriage laws began to vibrate in various national jurisdictions, causing ripples that spread through the legal disputes of rights first in non-procreative marriage and divorce rights, and subsequently in gay and transgender marriage legal challenges. Using the groundbreaking case of W v. Registrar of Marriages heard in Hong Kong's various courts (2010-2013), this article attempts to work through the conceptual possibilities offered by a postcolonial legal approach to understand the contingent but real legal possibilities to advance an immanent politics of transgender justice in the 20th century.
Over the last decade workforce diversity has attracted much scientific attention. Given the shortage of literature on issues related to homosexual, bisexual and transgender employees, compared to other facets of workforce diversity, this book opens up new perspectives on this issue. Emphasis is placed on the equal consideration of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender issues. Thus the predominance of lesbian and gay issues in LGBT research (and practice), will be contrasted by an explicit consideration of the unique experiences, stressors and related needs of bisexual and transgender employees. Contributions provide deeper insights into the differing experiences the whole spectrum of LGBT employees make in the workplace in different national and occupational contexts. Furthermore, the collection offers contextualized insights for evaluating and conceptualizing organizational initiatives aiming at a higher level of inclusion for LGBT employees
In: Northwestern Public Law Research Paper No. 23-10
SSRN
SSRN
In: University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform, Band 55, Heft 1
SSRN
In: (2020) 13:2 McGill Journal of Law and Health 73
SSRN
In: Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society, Vol. 28, p. 219, 2013
SSRN
In: Politics, Groups, and Identities, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 165-176
ISSN: 2156-5511
In: Politics, Groups, and Identities, Band 3, Heft 3, S. 398-416
ISSN: 2156-5511