Monday, 21 September 2009
New SSQWG Committee
Chair: Gavin Brown, University of Leicester
Secretary: Kath Browne, University of Brighton
Treasurer: Eleanor Wilkinson, University of Leeds
Ordinary Committee members:
Phil Hubbard, Loughborough University
Jason Lim, Royal Holloway University of London
Nick McGlynn, Brighton University
Jo Stanley, Lancaster University
Yvette Taylor, Newcastle University
Andy Tucker, University of Cambridge
Mary Whowell, Simon Fraser University
Thomas Wimark, Stockholm University
We thank all the committee members from 2008-09 who stood down at the AGM for all of their hard work.
Please contact Gavin, Kath or Eleanor if you have ideas for events SSQWG could organised, or want to get involved in our work.
Reports on the Sexualities in/of the Global South workshop
Here two of the travel bursary recipients report on the conference. First, Sarah Keenan a PhD student at the University of Kent:
"The Sexualities in/of Global South workshop in Manchester brought together a number of scholars from varied fields including geography, law, sociology and women's studies. The papers presented were varied in terms of home institutions, early and later career scholars, and in terms of focus. There were a number of papers focussing on particular regions, such as Brazil, India and Nepal as well as an interesting paper by Dr Kate Bedford on heterosexuality and international institutions. I came away from the workshop with a renewed sense of the importance of an intersectional understanding of issues of race and sexuality."
Elsbeth Robson, a research fellow at the Universities of Malawi and Brunel University, shares these thoughts:
"This was a very interesting and stimulating workshop which represented the first cooperation between DARG (one of the most well established and active research groups of the RGS-IBG) and SSQWG which is probably the newest research grouping. It was encouraging to see a spread of participants from both groups and there was plenty of fruitful discussion. The presentations ranged from research proposals (some funded and about to commence, others still in formulation) to well polished research output. Topics covered sexual trafficking past and present, development discourses of feminism and heteronormativity, sexual diversity, queer performances, identity and politics. The organisers are to be commended and hopefully this is just the start of further collaboration and exploration of sexualities in/of the Global South by geographers."
We share Elsbeth's hope that this event will be the first of many collaborations between SSQWG and DARG. We thank everyone who attended the event and made it such a positive and stimulating exchange of ideas.
Thursday, 23 July 2009
Sexualities in and of the Global South
Manchester, 25th August 2009
Organised by the Developing Areas Research Group (DARG) and the Space, Sexualities and Queer Working Group (SSQWG) of the Royal Geographical Society/Institute of British Geographers, UK.
Critical attention is increasingly being directed towards the heterogeneous constitution of sexualities in a global perspective, an engagement that can also shed new light on the social and cultural geographies of the Global South. We understand ‘Global South’ not as a given and fixed geographic region but rather as a term indicating spaces in a subaltern position (related in particular to capitalist and post/colonialist regimes of power) in relation to the Global North. Diverse themes emerge from the recent engagements with sexualities and the Global South: from everyday intimacies to economic relations and sexual health, from arguably heteronormative development interventions to sexual identities, human rights and citizenship.
This one day workshop has a number of confirmed speakers (including Kate Bedford, Mériam Cheikh, Tony Furlong, Simon Hutta, Nina Laurie, Steve Legg, Laura Paetau and Diane Richardson), who will begin discussions of various, often intersecting, issues:
- The relation of changing markets and intimacies in Latin America (Bedford)
- Sexual-economic practices, trafficking and their representations in Morocco (Cheikh), colonial India (Legg) and Nepal (Laurie and Richardson)
- Everyday experiences, identity performances, and LGBT anti-violence politics in Brazil and Colombia (Furlong, Hutta, Paetau)
This day conference seeks to develop connections and links for those who seek to consider these and further issues relating to sexualities and the Global South. It is designed to be supportive, so that thoughts and topics can be articulated across often segregated areas of study. In this spirit, emerging and embryonic ideas are welcome throughout the event.
The organising team would now like to invite participants to be part of this event, which will include spaces for dialogue and discussion.
The conference will act as a pre-conference to the Royal Geographical Society Institute of British Geographers Annual Conference 2009. Attendance at the preconference will cost £15 for waged/£5 for unwaged. There are a number of bursaries available to encourage the participation of students and unwaged persons.
Annual General Meeting
The AGM itself will take place on Wednesday 26 August 13:10 - 14:25 (room tbc). You do not need to be attending the RGS-IBG Annual Conference to attend the SSQWG AGM.
If SSQWG members would like to add items to the agenda for the AGM, please inform Jason Lim (Secretary) of these items by email. Items can be added to the agenda until 28th July 2009.
About SSQWG
a) To provide a forum to explore the meanings and implications of new directions in the geographies of sexualities; and to further explore the dialogue between geographical thinking and queer theory.
b) To stimulate and develop critical debate about geographies of sexualities within academic geography and in cognate disciplines.
c) To encourage greater dialogue between geographers and policy-makers, professionals and diverse ‘publics’ regarding key contemporary issues in the geographies of sexualities.
d) To offer a supportive environment for the exchange of ideas and the development of social networks to fight discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and/or practices, gender dissonance and other forms of gender/sexual prejudice.
e) To build upon the activities of the former RGS-IBG Space, Sexualities and Queer Working Group.
f) To encourage collaborative links to research groups and practitioners within other disciplines as well as other RGS-IBG Research Groups.
g) To maximize the involvement of postgraduates and new researchers in all of the Research Group’s activities.
h) To constitute a sustainable forum and support network that draws on research on the geographies of sexualities to further stimulate a growth in the number of taught courses and course modules in the field.