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COVID19 geographies: activities and activisms of those opposed to or concerned about changes to sexual and gendered legislation and cultures
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COVID19 geographies activities and activisms of those opposed to or concerned about changes to sexual and gendered legislation and cultures.pdf | 751.35 KB |
Alternative Title
GeografÃas del COVID-19: Actividades y Activismos de aquéllos que se oponen o están preocupados por cambios en la Legislación y las Culturas Sexuales y de Género
Géographies de la pandémie de COVID19: les activités et les activismes des personnes qui contestent ou craignent les changements juridiques et culturels concernant les sexes et les genres
Author(s)
Date Issued
24 August 2022
Date Available
17T11:48:03Z November 2022
Abstract
COVID19 is inherently geographical in its impact on society. Not only has it deepened pre-existing inequalities and further isolated groups that rely on physical spaces, such as LGBTQ people, the pandemic required a restructuring of multiple forms of time–space relations including activism. Using interview and questionnaires responses from early 2021, we explore the impact of COVID19 on the activities of those expressing concerns about, and opposition to, socio-legal changes related to sexualities and genders in Canada, Great Britian and Ireland. Participants’ perceptions of the effects of COVID19 regimes (lockdowns and restrictions) highlight four key trends. First, the biggest group of questionnaire respondents understood their views/activities as unchanging. Second, some participants noted a disengagement with sexual and gender politics. Third, those who were activists before/during COVID19 noted challenges in continuing their activities online with the loss of face-to-face interactions, and how they negotiated new spatialities. Finally, for some participants COVID19 regimes meant either newly engaging in, or increasing their pre-pandemic, activism with time to ‘research’ and to develop their activities. Further work is needed to investigate if our findings are similar to other groups engaged in other forms of activism and the longitudinal effects and implications of COVID19 geographies on activism.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
European Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Journal
Social and Cultural Geography
Start Page
1
End Page
19
Copyright (Published Version)
2022 The Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1464-9365
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Scopus© citations
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