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26. Pink Links: Visualizing the Global LGBTQ Network

  • Christina Kiel , Megan E. Osterbur and Christine Keating
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LGBTQ Politics
This chapter is in the book LGBTQ Politics
© 2020 New York University Press, New York, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Acknowledgments xi
  4. 1. Introduction 1
  5. Part I: Building LGBTQ Movements
  6. Introduction 11
  7. 2. Rethinking GLBT as a Political Category in U.S. Politics 14
  8. 3. Politics outside the Law: Transgender Lives and the Challenge of Legibility 34
  9. 4. The Treatment and Prevention of HIV Bodies: The Contemporary Politics and Science of a Thirty- Year- Old Epidemic 54
  10. 5. Queering Reproductive Justice: Toward a Theory and Praxis for Building Intersectional Political Alliances 72
  11. 6. The “B” Isn’t Silent: Bisexual Communities and Political Activism 89
  12. 7. Embodying Margin to Center: Intersectional Activism among Queer Liberation Organizations 110
  13. 8. From “Don’t Drop the Soap” to PREA Standards: Reducing Sexual Victimization of LGBT People in the Juvenile and Criminal Justice Systems 134
  14. Part II: LGBTQ Politics in the Discipline of Political Science
  15. Introduction 153
  16. 9. Our Stories 157
  17. 10. The Politics of LGBTQ Politics in APSA: A History (and Its) Lesson(s) 177
  18. 11. Power, Politics, and Difference in the American Political Science Association: An Intersectional Analysis of the New Orleans Siting Controversy 198
  19. 12. Where Has the Field Gone? An Investigation of LGBTQ Political Science Research 212
  20. 13. Unfulfilled Promises: How Queer Feminist Political Theory Could Transform Political Science 234
  21. Part III: LGBTQ Politics and Public Opinion in the United States
  22. Introduction 249
  23. 14. The How, Why, and Who of LGBTQ “Victory”: A Critical Examination of Change in Public Attitudes Involving LGBTQ People 252
  24. 15. Equality or Transformation? LGBT Political Attitudes and Priorities and the Implications for the Movement 270
  25. 16. Case Studies of Black Lesbian and Gay Candidates: Winning Identity Politics in the Obama Era 295
  26. 17. Equality in the House: The Congressional LGBT Equality Caucus and the Substantive Representation of LGBTQ Interests 309
  27. 18. Gay and Lesbian Candidates, Group Stereotypes, and the News Media: An Experimental Design 334
  28. Part IV: Marriage Equality Politics
  29. Introduction 351
  30. 19. Marriage Equality: Assimilationist Victory or Pluralist Defeat? 353
  31. 20. The State of Marriage? How Sociolegal Context Affects Why Same- Sex Couples Marry 374
  32. 21. Queer Sensibilities and Other Fagchild Tools 394
  33. 22. You Don’t Belong Here, Either: Same- Sex Marriage Politics and LGBT/Q Youth Homelessness Activism in Chicago 414
  34. Part V: LGBTQ Politics in Global Context
  35. Introduction 437
  36. 23. Political Science and the Study of LGBT Social Movements in the Global South 439
  37. 24. Homonationalism and the Comparative Politics of LGBTQ Rights 458
  38. 25. Top Down, Bottom Up, or Meeting in the Middle? The U.S. Government in International LGBTQ Human Rights Advocacy 477
  39. 26. Pink Links: Visualizing the Global LGBTQ Network 493
  40. Part VI: Queer Futures
  41. Introduction 523
  42. 27. Whither the LGBTQ Movement in a Post– Civil Rights Era? 525
  43. 28. Scouting for Normalcy: Merit Badges, Cookies, and American Futurity 545
  44. 29. Queering the Feminist Dollar: A History and Consideration of the Third Wave Fund as Activist Philanthropy 563
  45. 30. Single- Sex Colleges and Transgender Discrimination: The Politics of Checking a “Male” or “Female” Box to Get into College 580
  46. About the Contributors 599
  47. Index 607
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