BREAKING NEWS

Saturday, 31 December 2011

Most Influential LGBT Twitter Users of 2011

Pink News revealed earlier today that Stephen Fry has been named the most influential LGBT Twitter user in PinkNews.co.uk’s 2011 list.

In early December, PinkNews.co.uk sought nominations for the users LGBT readers listened to the most. These nominations were then run through the PeerIndex social media ranking system to draw up a list of the top 50 LGBT Tweeters.  PeerIndex measures how authoritative and interesting other people think a Twitter user is, as well as what topics and categories drive that interest, rather than focusing only on the number of followers each user has.

Of immense shock to me, is my own inclusion in the list - at 26th.  No word yet on how Russell Tovey feels about sharing the 26th spot.   The list in full can be viewed here.  I am absolutely delighted, and would like to thank those who nominated me, and those who follow me, RT my thoughts and interact with me on everything from legal change to Strictly Come Dancing.  Here's to a wonderful 2012!

Truth, Crime and the Hunt for Paedophiles

The Times carries a fascinating piece today revealing that lie detector tests are being used to help to decide whether to charge suspected criminals for the first time in British policing history.  The Times makes clear elsewhere that whilst the tests are 'reliable', they are not 'perfect'.  Check out the Independent take on the story if you don't have access to The Times.

A pilot was conducted by Herefordshire Police who tested 25 'low level' sex offenders.  According to The Times, 'many were exposed as being a higher risk to children than originally thought. A further 12-month trial has been approved to begin in April.'

A separate piece provides detailed exploration of the pilot through a case analysis of 'Michael'.   He was arrested on suspicion of loitering outside a school and following pupils in his car.  Acts which - the Police would surely argue - suggest the intention to commit an offence with those children.  A predator stalking his prey.  Michael denied the allegations but he did admit that he had accessed indecent images over two years and had used search engines to look for young girls.  However, he insisted he had no physical sexual interest in children.

Michael was, it seems, making a distinction between 'desire' and action, between possessing a fantasy and acting upon it.  Law traditionally focuses upon action rather than desire in sexual offences but paedophilia is something of a peculiarity for English criminal law.  For example, the law accepts a sixteen year old can have sex with a forty-nine year old.  Socially, it might be looked upon with disdain but it is legally tolerated.  However, if that 49yo takes a photograph on his phone or a makes a video of the encounter for subsequent sexual succour he has (thanks to the Coroners and Justice Act 2009) become a paedophile.  Ta-dah!  In the curious scenario, the 'desire' is condemned more than the actual consensual act.  Go figure.

In the case of Michael, Detectives found 'low-level' images in his bedroom but a search of his computer and other storage media did not turn up anything on top of admissions that Michael, 56, had already made.  So, the Police strapped him to a polygraph in a bid to obtain further answers.  Arguably, the investigation would have ended there without the polygraph - although it's not entirely clear. Michael disclosed for the first time that he had communicated with children online for a sexual purpose. He said that he had seen young girls on webcam sites, and had asked them to perform sexual acts while he watched. Michael issued denials to a series of questions including whether he had engaged in physical sexual contact with children and whether he had tried to arrange a meeting with someone younger for a sexual purpose. He also denied taking any images of children for a sexual purpose or distributing indecent images of children. The polygraph detected strong deception in his answers to all of those questions. Consequently, Michael was deemed to be a higher risk than first thought and the investigation into his activities was prioritised. He was removed from the polygraph testing trial as it is for low-level offenders only.

What does this mean?  Michael's been deemed a higher risk in the absence of evidence and 'risk' is not an offence per se (although presumably from the material they found, they had enough to charge him anyway).  What subsequently happened to Michael is unknown insofar as it is not explained in the piece.

There is an assumption that having been regarded as a 'higher risk', he will - at the very least - be monitored more closely than he might otherwise be, but quite where that mandate comes from legally is questionable.  Even if one sets that aside, there is an assumption that resources for these support mechanisms are adequate when we know they're not.  Voluntary groups are few and far between as the general public are far more likely to dip their hand in their pocket to support another charity rescuing cuddly animals in a far away land than providing support mechanisms to support paedophiles in their community.  Vital groups such as Circles UK need more support, but volunteers are unlikely to be able to 'admit' to being involved to many employers for fear of raising eyebrows and questions about their own motivations.  It is impressive and encouraging that they do indeed attract volunteers enabling their vital work to continue.

So, we assume - wrongly - that Michael might now get further 'support' or 'monitoring' dependent upon your linguistic spin.

The broader point is, as I touched upon above, the issue of desire.  An attraction to children is a social and legal taboo.  Within gay culture, an attraction towards youth - and attributes we associate with it - smooth hairless bodies, androgynous bodies, smooth faces, boyish smiles, and 'fun' personalities come together in the twink identity.  A label celebrated within gay culture and pornography, and an identity to be found in many a gay club and bar this evening as towns and cities celebrate NYE.   Desiring these figures is acceptable.  Even the more muscular twink can be a symbol of acceptable attraction.  The diver Tom Daley is unusual in being a child that many gay men could openly admit to finding sexually arousing and not feel condemned as a paedophile.  A fascinating development in itself.

Upon turning 16, even more men appeared to admit to a 'long-standing' attraction - which suggests attraction whilst still a child.  At 17, those fantasying men -assuming Daley is mutually attracted - could now have legal sex with Daley.  However, should Daley be photographed in less than his famously figure hugging trunks, his photographer would be in a spot of bother.  Expect a greater outpouring of Daley adoration during the Olympics next year (Daley will have just turned 18 so nude shots will be OK should he have a trunk malfunction at the Olympics).

In the case of Michael, it is this reluctant admittance of desire that seems to have landed him deeper in the crapola than he might have otherwise found himself.   The argument about child pornography is that it is a 'record' of a child being abused and thus to share that image is to create a market and encourage further abuse of children.  Thus if you wish to stop the market, you should stop the images.  You are therefore vicariously abusing a child.

Yet what of pseudo-photographs or cartoons? Bits of multiple images joined together to create a new sexual image, or using a computer or animation technology to create a pornographic image? Legally, this too is treated in the same way as a photograph.  Why?  The market argument is phony in these circumstances.  It is instead about the policing of desire.  From mental desire, to looking at an image is a step, a step to re-enforcing a mental pathway of desire.  Neurons making the connection between images of youth and sexual arousal. The forging of these pathways of desire is of itself a social concern within our society.

However, our criminalisation of such desire - nobody is being harmed - is on the basis that desire is an indicator of potential future risk.  It's like suggesting that viewing a knife-block in Argos denotes you as a future knife armed murderer.

The continued introduction of these polygraphs therefore is about a significant extension in the policing of desire.  Our society can not regard paedophiles as anything other than universally bad - despite our occasional admittance of widespread youthful desire, as in the case of Tom Daley - and thus the criminalisation of this desire is a logical extension that can not be argued without raised eyebrows and agendas questioned.  If a government proposed the mandatory badge wearing by convicted paedophiles would it be opposed?  If gas chambers for paedophiles were advocated, would they be opposed?

These are of course emotive and extreme examples but they serve to highlight the dangers of the road we are on.  In criminalising desire we make black and white assumptions about our own desires; are we really that sure of our own purity?

Thursday, 22 December 2011

Farewell 2011

It's that time of the year when I sign off for 2011, with this, my 400th post of 2011.  In keeping with the festive spirit I offer some videos to entertain - and in the case of one even alert you to the importance of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 (oh yes).  One of my favourite shows is the BBC series Mongrels - the second series of which sadly same to and end this week - and so I include a couple of musical songs from their first series to fill you with festive cheer and merriment.

What A Difference A Day Makes...

 

Everybody Loves a Lesbian...

 

 If neither of those are your thing, here's something a little more 'kinky' and clearly seasonal.



If you're still not happy, or simply prefer attractive men in skimpy underwear, here are seasons greetings from aussieBum.



Whatever your religion, belief or cultural view, I hope that those of you who do have a break these next few weeks re-charge your batteries, have fun with your snow balls and enjoy the seasonal stuffing.  See you all in 2012!

A Legal Year in Review

With the festive season upon us, and the year coming to a close it is perhaps inevitable to look back on the last twelve months. The big story has been partnership rights and marriage rights as the Coalition Government looked to focus the social policy agenda on 'families' in the wake of austerity at home, a global economic crisis and riots on the streets. The UK took steps towards same-sex marriage and this time next year it should be on the statute book. We'll then know what that means for civil partnerships and the ongoing legal action from the Equal Love Campaign. As I argued in the Huffington Post earlier in the year, this shift is in line with conservative thinking and presents some interesting questions for conservatives in the States. Yesterday saw the sixth anniversary for civil partnerships but we still don't know if those who are in civil partnerships today, will be this time next year and whether other people will have access to those rights. More than 46,000 civil partnerships have been held since the December 2005, with 18,049 of those taking place in the first year. How this area pans out in English law will be a key issue of law and sexuality in 2012.

In the US, as Obama sinks in opinions polls -and looks to an election in 2012 that he looks set to win not because of his skills at governing but because the GOP candidates look unelectable, his law and sexuality policy win has been the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell. Although signed this time last year, it's now been in force and is changing lives. NBC's Nightly News included a great feature last night on life in the armed forces post DADT. I've pasted it in below. The long term implications of the repeal will be to contribute to a cultural change in America enabling further progressive measures to pass. The problematic question for Obama is 'what now?' as US lobbying groups inevitably sharpen their political knives over the issue of same-sex marriage and the Perry case continues to progress (with the reassuringly legal pace of a snail) through the US courts.

 

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Sexuality, Culture, and Society, 16th Summer Institute

Readers (with the cash!) might be interested in this event.

Sexuality, Culture, and Society (July 1 - 26, 2012) www.gsss.uva.nl/sis

The 16th Summer Institute is open to students with a focused interest in sexuality research or advocacy, including MA and PhD students and professionals from non-governmental organizations (NGOs) engaged in sexuality, HIV, or sexual health programmes and interventions. The open atmosphere and small scale of Amsterdam is experienced by both western and non-western students as a refreshing stimulant for active discussion of sexuality and culture.

GayStarNews Launches

GSN is a new gay (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) news, entertainment and lifestyle website. They say they have full-time and freelance journalists working for us around the globe (London, New York, Los Angeles, Sydney, Shanghai) and will soon be offering 24-hour coverage for the first time in the gay media market.

It's headed up by Tris Reid-Smith and Scott Nunn.  Reid-Smith was previously editor of Gay Times and the Pink Paper whilst Nunn was previously a photographer with the MP Group which owns GT and the Pink Paper.

Gay Star News is in open ‘beta testing’ and getting good comments already. They are keen to hear feedback on the beta site and you can do that by emailing: feedback@gaystarnews.com.

They are also looking for tip-offs about stories and features you think they should cover.  Email: news@gaystarnews.com.

Contact them about advertising, sponsorship or affiliate opportunities by emailing scottn@gaystarnews.com.

Follow them on Facebook and on Twitter @gaystarnews. You can find full contact details and telephone numbers so you can stay in touch with us on our site at: www.gaystarnews.com/content/contact.

Fill Her Up: Trent Arsenault and the Curious Case of the Sperm Donor

Many many moons ago I had a massive row with an ex during our student days.  To raise a bit of money he decided that him and his (straight) mate would start providing sperm to the local clinic.  I hated the idea of him giving it away and mini 'A's' walking around the place.  I considered myself the sole benefactor of his erm, well sperm.  How many of you just cringed? Sorry about that, but the point is it's regarded by many as a precious and symbolic fluid.

Anyhow, Trent Arsenault (I swear I didn't make that name up) in the USA has been busy whizzing his jizz to anyone who wants it for free.  Talk about Santa emptying his sack.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, Arsenault's been a sperm donor for five years, offering his semen to women he meets on the Internet for free. But his baby-making days may be numbered. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has told him to stop giving away his sperm - or face a $100,000 fine or up to a year in prison - on the grounds that he's ignoring federal regulations that require blood tests every time a person donates any kind of body tissue or fluid. He's allowed to keep providing sperm while his case is pending.

So get it while you can.  You can read the full story here.    

It's a fascinating story given the way we freely exchange bodily fluids, and specifically Sperm in a non-regulated way.  Thing of all that fellatio, we don't have the Environment Agency ensuring that it meets food safeties tankards do we?  I'm assuming a penis would fail owing to faulty plumbing and the sperm ejector being shared with the urine ejector.  Yet, in certain artificial contexts, the law does become involved.

Here, because a man is 'giving away' his sperm in this way, the FDA would feels the need to be involved.  If on the other hand, he was feeling less generous and was more interested in just having lots of unprotected sex, knocking up half of California, he'd be exempt.  It's going to make for an absolutely fascinating case.

Overexposed and Policing Public Sex

I was alerted to these stories via David Downs on Google+.  Two police forces in the US recently appear to have swung into more public sex operations.  I'm sure there are more incidents out there but these are the ones reported recently.  It's a reminder that around the world, public sex venues continue to be assaulted by law enforcement agencies.  In England and Wales, some Police forces try and balance public complaints against their other priorities and diversity missions, but whether in the UK or USA, law enforcement officials still seem to spend an amazing amount of time criminalising consenting individuals who really aren't harming anyone.

First up, Westchester County Police who released the names and photographs of sixteen men.  A disgraceful breach of their privacy and ensuring devastation to the lives of these men. The Police were unrepentant, stating:  “We are going public with Operation Overexposed in the hope that it will be a further deterrent. If you come to Saxon Woods Park for this purpose, you will be arrested and your name will be released to the media.”

The men were aged from 37 to 75.  Quite the threat this 75 year old and his dick represents to the good folk of Westchester County alludes me but there we go.  Read more on that here.

Next up, we cross to Lee County Sherrif's Office and the news that on December 16, 2011, members of the Lee County Sheriff's Office Narcotics/Vice Unit conducted an undercover operation at 18021 John Morris Road (Bunche Beach), due to receiving complaints of men participating in acts of lewdness in public. During the two hour operation, three men approached undercover male detectives at separate times and engaged in conversations indicating they were looking for sexual activity. During the course of these conversations, all three men exposed themselves further indicating they wished to participate in sex acts.

Three men were named and charged.  You can read more on that incident here.   The three men on this occasion were aged 81, 73 and 62.  Personally, I'm rather in awe of an 81 year old still horny enough to go cruising, but society apparently expects 81 year olds to sell Werther's Originals and sip their food through a straw while rotting in some hell hole care home.  The pensioner as a sexualised being challenges so many of our societal norms, and that he does so in a cruising context seems to blow our minds.  Yet, why not have an OAP cruising or dogging outing?  It's got to be beat yet another trip to Blackpool.

Of particular interest in the Lee County incident was the use of agent provocateur tactics - something English police forces claim to no longer use.  The exposure it seems follows a conversation and it seems reasonable to assume that had the undercover police officer rejected the initial attempts at conversation, no exposure would have occurred.  These were not men wandering around a beach with their penises flapping in the breeze.

Ahh I hear you say, they were responding to complaints.  Yes they were, and as I said above, the Police do have  a tricky hand to play when it comes to public sex but these complaints are often vague: men wondering on a beach 'looking suspicious', men spending overly long in a public toilet or men regularly seen visiting a location by someone who works there.  It is rare to hear of a complaint that someone witnessed an actual sexual act.

Whatever your view on these Police operations, these reports evidence - once again - that Police forces continue to spend time and energy on policing public sex and that men - despite a changed legal landscape - continue to engage in it.  We can't go on like this.

HIV is Not a Crime

Here's a wonderful little video (lasting 8mins) by Sean Strub documenting the issue of HIV criminalisation in the US.  Well worth a watch.

 

Some People Are Gay...in Prison?

Feltham Young Offenders Institute appears to be in some hot water according to Pink News. They report that Prison staff at the Feltham Young Offenders Institute refused official recommendations to display positive images of gay and bisexual relationships to inmates, according to a report released today.

They don't include a link to the full report but it can be viewed here.   The report seems more positive on equalities than the picture painted by the Pink News Story.  Of greater concern for me was that young people didn't always have access to free telephone calls to their legal representatives but they did have relevant legal books in the library.  Seriously folks?  That's adequate for the demography likely to be needing advice?  (let alone a breach of legal rights).  

Anyhow, the fact prison officers resisted the display of the posters is disheartening but I suspect it came from a culture in which such posters  -it was specifically the Stonewall posters - might have led to increased bullying etc.  Feltham does, the report indicates, have issues with gangs to the extent of riots and in that environment the prison officers might think the Stonewall posters are inappropriate - for a host of reasons.  It doesn't necessarily indicate homophobia on their part.  I'd rather the posters were up, but this seems an area that the Inspectorate should have probed more, and groups such as the Howard League for Penal Reform should be less quick to condemn (as they do in the Pink News piece).

The report points to positive treatment of one trans inmate, stating:
'A transgender young person who arrived during the inspection was interviewed on the day of his arrival by the liaison officer to assess and address his needs. He was placed on a unit with a higher than average staffing level to address his support needs. Staff told us that they had previously put in place a programme of support for transgender young people, including the opportunity to wear suitable clothing for their preferred gender.'
On sexualities, the report concludes that:
'Some impressive work had been undertaken to support gay and bisexual young people and to raise awareness of issues among young people and staff.'
Hardly condemnation.  The report and the Pink News story point to the presence of a group - PRIDE - as a positive sign but many years of report writing made me question thesis action.  The report writes (and this bit is repeated in the Pink News report):
'A support group for gay young people, PRIDE, had been established which met whenever there were young people who wanted to attend it. All young people were told about it on induction, which provided an opportunity for young people to offer information about their sexual orientation if they wished.'
So, how often has it met? How many people attend? What do they do? How useful did people find it.  As currently phrased, this sounds like something that exists on paper but not in practical reality.

Read the full Pink news story here.

Treasure Island Media Loses the Plot? *UPDATED 28/12/11*

I continue to be fascinated and inspired by the San Francisco based porn company Treasure Island Media but their latest move has me stumped.  In contrast to their usual antics, it's lazy, un-original and lacks authenticity.

Their New York based pornographer, Max Sohl, posted on his blog yesterday a short post and a video lasting just under six minutes.  He wrote:
'sometimes we work on scenes that are deleted from a video in the final stages before the movie comes out and they go into the TIM abyss never to be heard from again. until now. here’s some free porn from the cutting room floor. at one time this little scene was an entrée act to UP THE GUT, but we killed it (for reasons that hopefully will be obvious). merry fucking christmas.'
Up the Gut - which the scene is taken from - was released earlier this year and is a very Sohl film - if such a thing can exist - in that it contains scenes that have a lot of energy and expressions of 'raw' desire.  It's this depiction of men, almost lost in their 'true' desire that - for me - seems to characterise his work. Part of the whole ethos of the company is to present men in their 'natural' state, an authentic sexual experience which features bareback sex.  A porn nature reserve if you will.

At the start of the year TIM tried to ratchet up the controversy stakes, declaring 2011 the year of living positively, and announcing porn featuring openly HIV positive performers.  That strand - which I thought would become more high profile - seems to have fizzled out and now we have this sorry clip.

It features a man walking into an apartment, a man awaiting, dressed in a thong, positioned on his bed, arse in air.  A scene documented on many an anonymous 'cumdumspter' blog.  So far, so scripted  - and slightly un-TIM.  Then we get -shock - a man penetrating the guy with a condom.  No conversation takes place indicating that he would wear a condom, and the bottom does not feel the guys dick to see if he is wearing a condom (as might often happen - and is common in dark sex clubs where people might be conscious of such things).  Soon after, the guy slips the condom off and continues to fuck bareback.  Eventually he says he is going to cum, and asks where he should cum, the other guy says, if you're still wearing the condom, in his arse.  He comes, and leaves.  No relaxed authentic exchanges at the end of the scene, just a fake departure.  I also think it typical for the bottom to feel back, to check that a condom was used.

The whole scene is typical of the mainstream porn fakery which TIM normally stays clear of.  Although TIM has shot previous scenes using condom - they've used it to indicate a trade off -where ultimately the penetrators/tops couldn't resist fucking bareback and remove the condoms (thus enhancing the erotic context - and in line with the true desire discourse of TIM films).  Here, we don't even have that, we have someone apparently getting fucked unknowingly bareback - filmed by a bareback porn company.  This sort of 'OMG, you did what?' scene has been common in straight porn for years, such as in the Don't Cum Inside Me series.  We don't have the outrage bit (often cringe in straight porn) but otherwise it's straight out of the old straight porn book.  Yawn.

Of course, the twist - and the video was subsequently sent out to TIM fans via email - is the heading for the video: 'Stealth Breeding', deliberately evoking HIV 'stealthing'.  This the practice whereby an HIV+ partner deliberately seeks to transmit HIV to another through deception.  It's a far more straight forward scenario than say the issues around recklessness in English law and is the one area that even defenders of barebacking - such as myself - say "hang on folks".  A tiny minority defend the practice (which I find abhorrent) and even indicate they engage in it.   Sohl is desperately trying to play into that controversy but in a year that TIM failed to really shake things up with an HIV+ series, it seems desperate.

Like watching your Dad dance at a disco, this is just plain wrong.  This isn't about being bad boys, it's being bad at being bad boys.   So sure, the scene was cut.  Not because it was shocking and controversial but because it didn't deserve to be in a TIM film.  You can view the NSFW video for yourself here.

*UPDATE* The latest 'Island' email update from TIM features a link to Max's blog and a response he made to these comments (in an indirect sort of way) on 21 December.  He also tweeted it to me but put a space between the '@' and 'lawandsexuality' so I never saw it in my mentions (and hence have only noticed it now).  Anyhow...Max seems to have gone on a whole Silence of the Lambs thing which I don't really get.  A screenshot of the video is captioned 'he feels for the condom at 1.30 Chris' so I'm guessing that's aimed that me.  I re-watched and yes he does touch the condom at the point and maybe he was feeling it, but it looked as if what he was actually doing was pushing the dick in and thus in the course of that felt the condom - so whether he intentionally sought to feel for a condom or not remains a moot point (at least for me).  However, lawyerly hair-splitting aside, he did obviously know at that point that the guy was wearing a condom - and my original point was he might not (so that's me told).  The comments from TIM fans seems to match my own impression about the 'fakery' and TIM must have - in some way - agreed that the scene wasn't up to snuff because they cut it.    The key points about 'steal thing' and controversy remain unaddressed but it's likely that TIM have something up their sleeve for the new year.

Read Max's response in full here (NSFW).

Lesbian couple file lawsuit against Hawaii hotel

A fascinating story has emerged from Hawaii.  According to the Pink Paper, a couple from Los Angeles have filed a lawsuit against a bed and breakfast in Hawaii, claiming they were refused a room because they were lesbians.

The story has parallels with the B&B controversies in this country which saw the Equality Act goods and services provisions tested legally, politically and socially.  It's interesting to see a similar sort of testing in another part of the world, indicating the process that such laws perhaps inevitably, must go through.

Check out the full story here.

NWT Canada Finance Minister accused of trans bullying

Jane Fae reports a fascinating incident on her blog. She notes that the Finance Minister of Canada’s Northwest Territory, Michael Miltenberger has been reported to the Human Rights Commission. Why you might ask...Well, he is apparently accused of discriminating against a woman in Fort Smith, NWT, during a visit by the Governor General to Aurora College campus on 9 December because she is transgender.

Read the full story/details on Jane's blog here.

Gender & Law at Durham (GLAD) Conversation 2012: with Finn Mackay

I went along to this excellent annual event for the first time last year to hear Stephen Whittle.  Gender and Law at Durham (GLAD) have announced this week that the 2011/12 speaker will be the award-winning feminist activist Finn Mackay.

Finn is the Founder of the London Feminist Network and the revived Reclaim the Night London, Co-Founder of the Feminist Coalition against Prostitution, and Individual Winner of the 2010 Emma Humphreys Memorial Prize for Outstanding Work on Women and Violence.

The event will take place on Tuesday 7th February 2012, in the Joachim Room, St Hild & Bede College, Durham University, from 3.30 to 5.30pm. Places are free but limited. To book, please contact law.events@dur.ac.uk. The event will be followed by an informal drinks reception.

Finn has also agreed to hold an informal workshop for feminist activists from 2pm. The workshop is an opportunity to learn more from Finn about organising feminist groups, events and campaigns. If you’re interested in attending the workshop, please clearly state this when booking your place. If you have any questions about the event, contact Dr Erika Rackley at erika.rackley@dur.ac.uk. More information about GLAD and the 2012 GLAD Conversation can be found on their website.

I would encourage Sunderland Law and Sexuality students to attend the main 3.30pm talk if possible.  GLAD have also provided a link to a video of Finn which you can watch below:


I've previously seen Finn in action the other year in a BBC series on women and feminism.  She's an inspirational figure in many ways, a passionate and tireless advocate but I'm confident I will become increasingly agitated during her speech.  Her feminism, it seems to me, owes much to Andrea Dworkin and Catherine MacKinnon and continues to be popularised by the journalist Julie Bindel.  For me, and many feminists her thinking although well-intentioned is out-dated.  Anyway, I hope to attend and maybe she'll shift my thinking.  Whether she does or doesn't, her brand of feminism is reaching out to growing numbers of women through events such as Reclaim the Night and in turn, defining feminism for a new generation.  She can't be ignored.

Public Research Project: F.B.I. Surveillance of Homosexuals and Gay Groups

Here's a US based research project which readers might be interested in getting involved with.

F.B.I. Surveillance of Homosexuals and Gay Groups OutHistory.org, the website on LGBT history, is asking the public to help document the evidence of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s surveillance of homosexuals, alleged homosexuals, and gay groups around the nation.

The website encourages the community’s participation in the recovery of LGBT history. It offers a public forum for logged on users to add to existing entries and create new articles. Historian Jonathan Ned Katz, co-director of OutHistory, initiated the survey after seeing the film J. Edgar. “After viewing that speculative interpretation of J. Edgar Hoover’s life I was eager to know what evidence exists of the rumors about his sexual proclivities. I wanted to learn what was actually documented about the F.B.I.’s spying on homosexuals, alleged homosexuals, and homosexual rights groups.”

“After surveying some of what’s published about the FBI’s surveillance of homosexuality, I put notes about it on OutHistory.org,” says Katz. “But I soon realized that the numbers of persons spied on, and the quantity of spying incidents is much greater than I could research by myself.

 To initiate this public research project, Katz created an OutHistory page titled the “F.B.I. and Homosexuality”. This introduces the subject, and provides links to (1) a bibliography of relevant articles and books, (2) a chronology of events, and (3) a list of persons and groups investigated. All of these are open to public additions. Katz asks the public to add data to these entries. OutHistory’s introduction to this survey may be viewed at: http://www.outhistory.org/wiki/F.B.I._and_Homosexuality:_A_History

Thursday, 15 December 2011

Homonormativity and the New Legal Citizenship: Viva Oppression?

Yesterday I presented an internal seminar on some of my ongoing work.  I published an article early this Autumn in Durham Law Review 'setting the theoretical scene' and plan on some further work coming out in the next couple of years (such is the speed of academic publishing) that develops my ideas around (homo)normativity.

The work is part of a series of Brown Bag seminars organised by the Law and Society research Cluster at the University, which I lead and organise.  You can check out the slides from my brief talk below and you can download the full article here.
Homonormative brown bag
View more presentations from Chris Ashford.

You can view the full Law and Society seminar programme for 2011-12 below.

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

Legal Spaces, Queer Spaces: The Castro

Law is a vital ingredient in the construction of space, notably that space which has been defined as 'queer'.  Whether in the form of Manchester's Canal Street or San Francisco's Castro, these 'communities' within a community, these villages', or 'ghettos' are a product of changing laws, offering a space defined by identity - and offering a place of inclusion whislt also excluding a class of citizen not deemed 'desirable'.  Often their mere existence is a result of legal oppression elsewhere yet increasingly these spaces fall under the gaze of city officials seeking to 'clean up' a space.  So it is interesting to see the way that legal powers are being applied with zeal by District 8 Supervisor Scott Weiner (a surprising number of US politicians with that name - by which I mean more than one) as he launches further proposed powers.

The Bay Area Reporter notes that smoking and camping would be banned and set hours for sitting on movable benches and chairs would be imposed at the Castro's two street plazas under new rules proposed by Weiner. The restrictions would apply to Jane Warner Plaza on 17th Street near Market and across the street at Harvey Milk Plaza above the Castro Muni station. The ordinance would specify that Jane Warner Plaza, the city's first Pavement to Parks project, falls under the rules that apply to the city's public parks. Wiener introduced the proposed rules on November 15 at the request of the Castro/Upper Market Community Benefit District, which oversees maintenance of the outdoor areas. The Board of Supervisors is expected to begin holding hearings on them in early 2012.

These are similar spaces to those you might see in New York - bits of the road/street that have been re-designated 'plazas' with chairs/tables/planted trees/palms and other street furniture.  I rather like them, and in the Castro they've always seemed busy spaces, and important social 'hubs'.

A legal technicality means that the plazas are still classed as 'street's, and so this change puts them on the same legal footing as parks.  So whilst street signs are up saying 'no smoking' (I confess, I never noticed them), they are not enforceable.  Leaving aside this remorseless attack on smoking (which in itself drives me crazy), the measures also mean that sitting on chairs or benches that are not permanent structures in either plaza would only be allowed between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m (which seems nuts). Sleeping would also be banned in both plazas any hour of the day which is not about ensuring that Castro citizens remain conscious in public at all times (elf and safety gone mad someone shouts), oh no, it's about ensuring that there is a reason so shift on those nasty homeless people.  "you can't sleep there", "who says?" can now be responded with some Americanisation of "it's the law innit".

The measures are not without opposition; queer activist Tommi Avicolli Mecca (for it is he) called the latest planned restrictions "more anti-homeless bigotry from Wiener and the folks at the CBD", he added: "Harvey Milk Plaza has always been a symbol of the freedom of the Castro, it's the place where Milk got up on a soap box and expressed his opinion about things," wrote Avicolli Mecca in an email, referring to the gay former city supervisor and Castro merchant the plaza honors. "Gay men have always stood and talked or congregated at any hours of the day and night in the plaza ... Now Wiener and the CBD want to impose restrictions on the plaza, such as no sitting on the benches after 9 p.m., that are intended only to stop a certain group of people from sitting or using the plaza."

BAR noted that Mecca predicted that the police would use the seating restrictions to harass homeless people and underage queer youth who hang out at the plazas at night. "Forty years ago, this is the kind of legislation that was often used to restrict the use of public space by gay men. Now it's used against the homeless or those perceived as homeless," wrote Avicolli Mecca. "As we used to say in ACT UP, 'Shame, shame, shame!'"  Mecca is probably right and this is yet another curious development in the use of queer space, following  Weiner's previous attack on nudists in the area (towels now need to be put down on furniture before you sit on them).  Yes, you can still be nude in the Castro, but no bare bum on the furniture thank you.  I think people should put towels down, but I don't like laws that say such a thing - it seems rather heavy handed.  You can read more on that here (check out the fab photo too).

This comes amidst controversial and saddening reports of changes at the iconic Castro Theatre - reinforcing the message I keep privately getting from folks that live in the Castro  - it's an area increasingly less 'gay' and an area in economic trouble.  Weiner's legal reforms could (unintentionally) be part of this narrative of 'normalising' the Castro and reducing gay inhabitants to no more than performing monkeys for the tourists.  It's a perfect example of the importance of understanding the social, historical, political and theoretical context in which law operates and the passionate feelings it can generate when its force is felt.

Recruiting Mormons

I offer this rather wonderful post on the Petrelis Files blog without further comment, except to say read it, it's very amusing and a little bit brilliant.  Check it out here.  

Mr Gay UK: Samuel Kneen

We have a winner! Samuel Kneen (22) was awarded the title of Mr Gay UK after months of gruelling competition on Saturday.


The contest returned after a three year gap, a return explained by organisers as 'due to popular demand and the extension of social-networking opportunities, giving a new edge this year - the online vote.'

People could vote via the website www.mrgayuk.co.uk, Facebook or Twitter for the guy they felt has the 'cutest face, hottest bod or nicest bum' (none of that high-minded nonsense here). The top five were then invited to the Grand Final, held at Club Mission in Leeds on Saturday 10 December, where Samuel was crowned the winner by the three judges, including Hollyoaks’ Kieran Richardson.

The prizes this year include a professional photo-shoot on location in Morocco, the opportunity to enter Mr. Gay Europe and £2000 in cash so it's pretty good going.  Well done Samuel (although frankly I was surprised the runner up, Charlie Drummond - who was a previous contestant in 2007 and was also in the Big Brother House in 2009 - didn't win).  I guess Drummond was desperate for some extra time on his 15mins of fame but the judges thought it fair someone else had a go in the spotlight.

The competition is a curious anachronism  in the modern homonormative world  -showing gay men as (gasp of air) horny creatures who are looking for the 'cutest face, hottest box or nicest bum' (and presumably those with bulges that resemble an anaconda in a jocks trap).   Presumably winners will have to adopt to our new socio-legal times, and thus I await photos of Kneen with his new partner (via a Civil Partnership) and their adopted first child (or if they have money, surrogate child - currently reserved for posho gays).  The continued presence of this gratuitous 'old gay' contest is political in a way I suspect it does not intend, but how long before legal freedoms prevent such public ogling?  How much longer can homosexual men admit to being sexually aroused by men?

It can surely only be a matter of time before we hear about the soul-destroying nature of this competition, how degrading it is for the men, and the those who watch.  So chaps, ogle while you can, and I shall permit myself to comment that red does rather suit him.  Next year we may be restricted to commenting upon his home-cooking and intellectual prowess.  I really must try and be less cynical in 2012...

Monday, 12 December 2011

Out & Proud Corporate Counsel Award Reception

US based readers might be interested in this event:

Out & Proud Corporate Counsel Award Reception
Thursday, February 2, 2012 | 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
The Terrace Club 25 West 51st Street
New York, New York

The Out & Proud Corporate Counsel Award Receptions give LGBT legal professionals and their straight allies the opportunity to honor distinguished colleagues who have worked hard to increase LGBT diversity awareness in the corporate office and in the community. These receptions provide a business casual environment for LGBT counsel of all levels of the corporate sphere to gather and network toward the betterment of diversity in the legal profession.

 This is a ticketed event. All corporate counsel receive complimentary tickets courtesy of the LGBT Bar. Click here to RSVP. For sponsorship opportunities and general admission tickets, please contact Kelly Simon at (202) 637-7661 or Kelly@LGBTbar.org.

Studying Sexuality

There have been a couple of really interesting blogs on conferences on the theme of sexuality - and their strengths and weaknesses.  QRG writes about a recent 'Pornified' conference.  There are some interesting observations but it is limited by the fact QRG didn't actually attend.  There are difficulties in interpreting these things - perspectives and gender would have been slightly tweaked by my presence - I was invited to speak at one of these conferences but I've forgotten which - but I couldn't get funding to attend.  I suspect the same was true for a few others so it doesn't take much to skew these things.  Nonetheless, some interesting comments.

Of greater interest, and perhaps value is a post by Jane Fae on a sexology conference (which I'd also hoped to attend but once again, I find myself in a funding black hole).   Fae makes some really interesting observations about disciplines coming together - but this is in part a growing agenda from the funding bodies so it's not entirely 'organic'.  Nonetheless, some fascinating broad perspectives about what is going on in the academic discussion and exploration of sexuality.

HIV in Europe: The Criminalisation of HIV and Stigma

Here's a brilliant little video taken from the HIV in Europe Conference a couple of years ago.  It includes Matthew Weait who many of my students will currently be reading in preparation for their assignments, giving you a bit more of an idea about his research and how the man behind those words you're reading looks and sounds. Some really interesting insights into his conceptions of 'good' vs 'bad' law.  The HIV in Europe initiative is directed by an independent group of experts which has come together to work for optimal testing and earlier care for HIV in Europe.  The group will be meeting again next year in Copenhagen - details here.

 

Queer Pedagogy: Queering Our Teaching, Queering our Learning

This looks brilliant! A free online course on queer pedagogy through Peer-To-Peer University (P2PU) has kicked off this week. Although they are in the first week, they are looking for a few more participants. Details @ http://www.p2pu.org/en/groups/queer-pedagogy

If you've got the time, it looks a terrific opportunity.

Heterosexuality Study

An undergraduate Psychology student at the University of the West of England, Bristol, Emma Smith [Emma15.Smith@uwe.ac.uk] is doing qualitative research on experiences of being heterosexual, and the meanings heterosexuality holds for people. Emma is looking for people aged 18 and older and who self-identify as heterosexual to complete a short online qualitative survey. To complete Emma's survey click on/cut and paste the following link: http://uwepsych.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_0iAagnhvT6nBrzS

HIV criminalisation and law reform in Nordic countries

The wonderful Prof Matthew Weait at Birkbeck has announced plans to undertake an important new research study in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden next Spring. He will be exploring the ways in which HIV activists and others have sought to reform criminal law concerning HIV transmission and exposure in the region.

Full details have been published on Edwin Bernard's Criminal HIV Transmission blog and can be read here.  Matthew is looking for participants to take part in his research so if you are based in that part of the world, and can help out, I'd encourage you to give him a  shout.

Saturday, 10 December 2011

Follow Friday: Politically LGBT

Yes, hopelessly late with my special Follow Friday mention as per.  This week it goes to a couple of figures.  The first mention goes to Adrian Trett who is Chair of LGBT Liberal Democrats among his various roles.  Follow him @Juvelad

My second mention goes to Matthew Sephton who is Chair of LGBTory - the Conservative LGBT group.  Follow him @MatthewSephton 

Together, they represent an opportunity to influence and shape LGBT thinking within the parties of the UK coalition government, plus they also offer insights into the kind of thinking that will inform decisions in five or ten years time.  Well worth a follow.

Hot Air American Style: International Initiatives to Advance the Human Rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Persons

Hillary Clinton is a busy woman and so I can only imagine the US Secretary of State was a) too busy to pre-read a speech she delivered this week in Geneva and b) the victim of her staff having a little fun.  Along with the White House she announced a commitment by America to the 'human rights' of LGBT people around the world - and a commitment to promote human rights issues in this area.  She also announced a new Global Equality Fund with $3 million in the kitty - and the hope other countries would chip in (the world is after all flush with cash).  For America, the $3 million figure is interesting - presumably Obama and Hillary had a root around the backs of official sofas for some small change, but the wider issue is of course America lecturing the world on LGBT rights - I mean really?

So, the question about whether Hilary actually knew what she was saying (surely she'd correct it or ask "hang on guys, this is for real?"was taken up by the media.  Via the wonders of open government, the teleconference briefing on the story was published on the US State Department website.  You can read it here.  One member of the media asked if Hilary had actually written the speech.  This was the punchy and clear response from officials:
Well, she has a terrific amount of input into all of her speeches, but this is a speech that is very much crafted in her voice and with her guidance and her intentions in mind. I mean, she knew when she was going to give the speech. She knew that, as she said in the speech, that it is a topic that is still sensitive for some, and she wanted to be aware of that, sensitive to that, respectful of that. As she said in the speech, she wanted to give people a chance to raise what they were concerned about, afraid about, et cetera. And yet it’s something on which she also said in her speech over time – over the course of her life, her own sensitivities and convictions have deepened. And so I think, as I said at the outset, the speech was – because of her guidance and because of the work that she did on the speech, she worked through multiple drafts and makes edits and captures exactly what kind of tone she wants and writes out paragraphs longhand, et cetera. And I think in doing that, she really – she very purposefully made it both firmly principled and also unimpeachably respectful. And I think in that respect, it reflects her broader vision and her leadership in this area.
Hmm! The full speech can be viewed here and watched below:




It is of course to be welcomed that America broadly takes this approach but perhaps their speech and political efforts should be focused inwardly as well as externally.   Moreover, careful reading of the speech will reveal an administration balancing freedom of religion with sexuality and a focus upon ensuring LGBT people are not criminalised,a rested and physically injured.  It avoids the tough questions of same-sex marriage, employment protections, goods and services rights, adoption and fertility rights, medical access for those seeking to transition and so on.

This failure -and that's what it is - enables countries such as Nigeria to dismiss these calls, and the whole speech to amount to nothing more than vacuous remarks.

The US administration also issued a Presidential Memorandum - quite literally a note from the boss to government agencies.  That memo applied to the Departments of State, the Treasury, Defense, Justice, Agriculture, Commerce, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the Export-Import Bank, the United States Trade Representative, and such other agencies as the President may designate.

It made a series of specific directions to agencies, requiring them to:

• Combat the criminalization of LGBT status or conduct abroad.
• Protect vulnerable LGBT refugees and asylum seekers.
• Leverage foreign assistance to protect human rights and advance nondiscrimination.
• Ensure swift and meaningful U.S. responses to human rights abuses of LGBT persons abroad.
• Engage International Organizations in the fight against LGBT discrimination.
• Report on progress.

The memorandum is worth reading in full which you can do here, and although it received less attention in the media, it is equally vacuous.  America, this isn't good enough.

#pinkpeople11

Jane Fae has written a brilliant post on the new list being drawn up by Pink News of 'the most influential [LGBT] twitter users'.  Jane like myself, did a couple of shout-outs to followers last night effectively saying 'vote for me'.  I'd got in on the act moments earlier.  Jane raises some really interesting points about the nature of these lists - and what exactly it is that your twitter account denotes.

I would rather shamelessly like to be on the list but compared to the excellent @JaneFae or @parisLees and @Benjamincohen - I am looking slightly less buoyant in my chances than the Titanic post iceberg incident.

Nonetheless, if you would like to nominate me (and frankly, why wouldn't you?) you just need to tweet '@lawandsexuality #pinkpeople11' and voting closes at 5pm on 16 December.  Full details here.   

Jane raises some really interesting thoughts in her post about our twitter identities.  Followers will perhaps be relieved that my Strictly Come Dancing #scd tweets will come to an end next week with the final.  Others will perhaps be disappointed.  As I've used twitter more, I've relaxed more about how I use it.  I do blow off steam, I do share the good moments and the bad.  I do post deeply academic stuff, I share information about the work of others and I promote my own research.  I also talk the occasional (or often) bit of drivel, I also talk about television, music, films and rather boring details of my life.  Why?  Well this is me.  I'm not (hopefully) just some dull academic tweeting about some marvellous and important law and sexuality story because let's be honest, that would be helpful but dull.  Alas, topless photographs of me are likely to deter followers rather than bring them in, and so being open, frank and willing to engage in debate are the values and characteristics that I can offer as an academic and a member of the twitterverse.

I'm not why anyone follows me, but I do know that the amazing conversations I have with people who stumble upon through these different strands of interest make up a richness to my role as a public academic, and as a member (subject to confirmation) of the human race.

CFP: Reconsidering Coming and Being ‘Out’? Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Research in the 21st Century

Hoping to attend this conference myself.  One held a few years ago in Newcastle was brilliant:

A one-day conference for academics, researchers and activists conducting research on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans issues and / or lives. 18th May 2012, 10.30am – 4.30pm London South Bank University It has been 3 years since we gathered at Northumbria University for the „Becoming or Unbecoming‟ LGB and T research conference in November 2008. That conference was the second of its kind following “Lesbian and Gay Lives in Focus” conference in London in December 2000.

The 2012 Conference seeks to bring together academics, researchers and activists from across the country to look at the state of LGB and T research, to chart a way forward and to bridge the gap between academia and activism. It follows a commitment from UCU Congress 2010 to support such a conference every three years in order to promote L, G, B and T studies. Papers are sought in nine broad areas or categories and should address key issues within one of these areas/categories. The issues/topic identified in each category is not an exhaustive list and we encourage you to identify an issue/topic if it does not appear in your chosen category of discussion.

Education and Development Papers in this area can cover

  • LGB and / or T issues in schools, colleges and universities, including as a workplace  
  • visibility in the curriculum 
  • working with the teachers 
  • learning and development for LGB and / or T people throughout life 


Health, Wellbeing and Sport Health issues affect many LGB and T people and papers can address a wide range of health issues including

  • age; 
  • HIV, AIDS and other sexual health matters; 
  • psychological dimensions of health,  
  • LGB and / or T people as carers – both professional and within families and friendship networks;  wellbeing including fitness and spiritual health;  
  • workplace wellbeing;  
  • LGB and / or T in sport. 


Heritage and Action It is important to understand where we have been and how heritage informs activism;

  • histories of activism; 
  • heritage and memory projects;  
  • lobbying efforts and campaigns. 


Households, Families and Relationships Papers can address all aspects of domestic life with a focus on

  • experiences of caring from LGB and / or T households; 
  • impact of diverse households on society; 
  • how LGB and / or T people lived in households historically;  
  • the diversity of relationships; 
  • alternative family models; 
  • LGB and / or T parenting including fostering and adoption. 


Homo and Trans phobia: Here we wish for papers to

  • explore homo and / or trans phobias both in and out of the work place; 
  • language issues; 
  • attitudes;  
  • challenging vs. preventing; 
  • conceptualisation of homo and / or trans phobia and 
  • exploring what if anything, homo and / or trans phobia has done for us  
  • international comparisons and projects 


Identity: Identity is a wide area and papers can address

  • both psychological and non-psychological perspectives; 
  • in-depth identification from the perspective of the individual;  
  • gender diasporas 


LGB and T People: Papers should explore who are we?

  • people in the mainstream;  
  • people on the margins; 
  • people on the margins of the mainstream; 
  • anthropological and sociological perspectives that includes a focus on equality groups age; disability; faith; gender; race ). 
  • being counted – data collection and demographics 


Policy and Law Over the years leading up to the Equality Act 2010 equality and anti discrimination

  • legislation shaped activism and experience 
  • historical and international perspectives 
  • hierarchies 
  • emergence of rights and the implications for LGB and / or T people 
  • crime, deviance, disorder, liberation and / or normality? 


Theory This area seeks to highlight new ways of thinking and theorising;

  • rethinking and reconceptualising coming and being out and LGB and T experiences more generally; relationships between activism, socio-economics, queer and other identity related theories. 


Proposals (of no more than 500 words) should be sent by e mail to the conference co-ordinators (Antoine Rogers and Seth Atkin) e mail: arac@london.com More information including application form for the conference will be sent out at a later date. Deadline for Proposals is: 4pm Wednesday 29th February

Call for Papers – GJSS Special Edition on Sexuality in Focus

Readers may be interested in this journal CFP - a brilliant opportunity for postgraduate students/early career academics.

The Graduate Journal of Social Sciences (GJSS) invites papers for its December 2012 special edition on Sexuality in Focus. This issue is inspired by the Network of Interdisciplinary Women’s Studies in Europe (NOISE) 2011 Summer School, which was hosted by the University of Utrecht (the Netherlands). This year’s theme was ‘The Miraculous (dis)appearing Act of Sexuality: Mapping the Study of Sexuality in Europe, 1960-2010’. Central to this summer school was the exploration of what has appeared in discourses of sexualities and what has been missing. The special issue aims to further explore this complex and multifaceted subject.

We invite scholarly contributions from postgraduate students, early career academics and activists engaged in LGBT, sexuality, feminist, queer, women’s and gender studies or related areas, to submit their work for consideration. Although NOISE summer school participants are strongly encouraged to submit their papers, we also welcome contributions from people outside of the NOISE network. Thus, we welcome contributions that offer important insights into debates surrounding sexuality. These include, but are not limited to, the following themes:

- Sexualities in the making: discussions of the epistemological, methodological, and thematic issues central to the interdisciplinary and intersectional study of sexuality in Europe and beyond; (historical) analyses of heterosexual, gay, lesbian, asexual, bisexual, queer and transsexual discourses or movements.

- Deconstructing sexualities: papers exploring the notion of (sexual) identity; the engagement with biological essentialism / determinism, social constructivism and newer insights in this debate.

- Sexual politics: sexuality and (post)colonialism; sexuality and the formation of the nation state; multiculturalism and homonationalism; sexuality and family politics; state censorship. In this strand we also invite papers which seek to bridge the gap between academic feminisms and feminist activisms.

- Reflexivity and intersectionality: how can we adopt a more intersectional approach to our work on sexuality? We invite papers exploring the ontological and epistemological relationship between the researcher and the subject of study in the field of sexuality. This strand also explicitly invites papers which explore the intersections of race, class, nationality, religion and other social categories, with gender and sexuality.

- Stigma and marginalization: we invite papers focusing on sexual practices or bodily aesthetics from an affirmative perspective. Papers might address BDSM; pornography; physical disabilities and sexuality; fatness and sexuality; or the sexual practices of other stigmatized groups.

A sixth strand is aimed at extending the debate on sexualities beyond the European / Western context. A selection of papers presented at the Arab Women, Media and Sexuality conference (University of York, May 2012) shall be included in a special section of this edition. Papers exploring the following themes are welcomed: representations of Arab women’s sexuality in Western and / or Arabic media; approaches to sexuality in Arabic media; Arab women’s perception of their sexuality vis-à-vis the media. The deadline for this section will be separate from the general deadline and will be announced.

For more information, please contact Ebtihal Mahadeen: im544@york.ac.uk. Submissions: Completed papers should be submitted by January 30th 2012. Papers should be 6000-8000 words. Please include an abstract (max 300 words), short author biography (max 150 words) along with three to five keywords. Papers submitted to the GJSS undergo an initial selection by the guest editors and then go through a double-blind peer review process. The special issue will be published in December 2012. Submissions must be accompanied by the GJSS article submission form. Detailed submission guidelines and formatting instructions can be found on the GJSS website: http://www.gjss.org/index.php?/gjss.org-submission-of-articles.html. Please submit your article to GJSSspecialed@gmail.com. Any enquiries regarding this special edition may also be directed to this email address.

CFP Sexualities Section of the American Sociological Association

Readers may be interested in this Call for Papers:

The Sexualities Section of the American Sociological Association invites you to be a part of the first national mini-conference on sexualities studies in sociology. This two-day (August 15-16) conference will precede the 2012 Annual Meeting of the ASA in Denver, Colorado.

 Crossing Boundaries, Workshopping Sexualities will bring together scholars working in the field of sexuality studies for an intensive two days of workshops, geared towards mapping and advancing the field, while building community and collective knowledge. To celebrate the vibrant life of the Sexualities Section, the conference also will include keynote panels by eminent sexualities scholars who will discuss the past, present, and future state of the field of sexualities research within sociology. 
This conference aims to unite junior and senior scholars working in related areas in an effort to share theoretical and methodological advances, create intellectual networks, and promote rich collaborations within the field of sexualities studies. More information: http://www.crossing-boundaries.org/

Friday, 2 December 2011

Sex Tourism

The 'sex tourism' has come to hold an immensely negative con nation, typically suggesting some Gary Glitter-esque holiday abusing children.  In reality, many people engage in 'sex tourism', visiting locations for new sexual experiences whether that means an international city such as Berlin or London, a salesman arranging rendezvous with other men in his hotel room, or a trucker having fun in their cab.  The Into the Abyss blog posted a nice little post about their kinky adventures on a recent visit to San Francisco, reminding us of the joy that these venues can offer, and promoting the question, as to why these experiences can't always be replicated back at home?

CFP: Bodies of Law / Law and the Body

Readers of this blog may be interested in the following Call for Papers, organised by the excellent Katie Cruz at Nottingham:

Bodies of Law / Law and the Body

An interdisciplinary conference for postgraduate and early-career academics in the area of law, gender and sexuality (see the PECANS network).

Friday 30 March 2012 School of Law, University of Westminster, London

UK CALL FOR PAPERS

This one-day conference seeks to bring together postgraduate and early-career scholars from across the UK and beyond to explore the general theme of ‘law and the body’. This event will investigate the different dimensions of how the ‘body’ as a governed entity is represented, regulated, and normalised within the legal order, while encouraging debate about law’s relationship to wider social structures and knowledges. Law mediates various power structures and is interwoven with numerous other knowledges that participate in the construction, normalization and regulation of bodies, such as medicine, social media, religion and the nation-state. Numerous feminist legal scholars have commented on law’s intimate relationship to, for example, medical discourses, arguing that the shape of legal power has changed to more regulatory and disciplinary forms. Inevitably law’s relationship to bodies/states of embodiment alters as it takes on these increasingly pervasive roles. One might conclude that the notion of a space where the law will not intervene is a liberal fantasy, out of step with the reality of law’s operations. How, then, should law be evaluated and/or harnessed?

Within this context, some of the questions we hope to address are: Does law privilege certain bodies/states of embodiment? If so, what are some of the ways that these privileged bodies can be detected in law and resisted? Should legal scholars continue to appeal to (or return to) fixed understandings of bodies, such as the ‘female’ body? How do bio-technologies affect and transform the relationship between body and law, especially within the processes of neoliberal governance and consumerism? In what ways are marginalised groups affected by the interaction of law and body within the discourses of (in)equality and difference? What has the advent of post-human and object-oriented thought meant for feminist conceptions of ‘the body’? Can we conceive of law without ‘the body’?

We invite papers addressing these and other related questions for inclusion in the conference program. Abstracts of no more than 200 words should be sent to Katie Cruz at llxkc4@nottingham.ac.uk by Friday 6 January 2012. Successful participants will be notified no later than mid-February.

We regret that we cannot guarantee participants funding for travel however there may be some small subsidies available. We will advertise any opportunities as they arise. Finally, papers presented at the conference will be considered for publication in a special issue of feminists@law, a peer-reviewed, online, open access journal of feminist legal scholarship. For more information about the journal, please visit http://journals.kent.ac.uk/index.php/feministsatlaw/index.

Follow Friday

Another double whammy Follow Friday as I was useless last week.  Hopefully now back on track for a few weeks.  First up is the wonderful @ThePansyProject and their wonderful website which you can view here.  The Pansy Project is an art/community project by Paul Harfleet.

Paul plants pansies at the site of homophobic abuse, he finds the nearest source of soil to where the incident occurred and generally without civic permission plants one unmarked pansy. The flower is then photographed in it's location and posted on his website, the image is entitled after the abuse. It's simple, touching and really quite wonderful.  Of course, in an ideal world Paul would have to halt his project because these sort of homophobic attacks had come to an end.

My second mention goes to the lovely chap who kindly designed the logo which still features at the top of this page, my old twitter logo and the logo which can still be found on my module Facebook page.   @gigoslurp is simply a lovely friendly kind sort, and you should follow for the simple reason that you can.

PhD Project Request

Readers may be able to help this doctoral student based at the University of Manchester:

Everyone has a story What’s yours?

Do you recall forming relationships with people you love, and for many decades being denied legal recognition for your relationship because you are in a relationship with a person of the same-sex. Do you recall how you felt when Civil partnership was introduced and learnt that you could now gain legal protections and rights for your relationship by having a civil partnership. At some point you decided to have a civil partnership for your relationship.

Were you aged 35-60 when you had a civil partnership? Would you be willing to share your story with a lesbian researcher about your life before and after civil partnership? Guaranteed anonymity and confidentiality!

For more details about the project contact:
Em Temple-Malt
Mobile: 07543 464 338
Email: Emmajane.temple-Malt@postgrad.manchester.ac.uk

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Apple's Siri, Abortion, and the Feminist Backlash

Bridget Crawford on Feminist Law Professors has posted a fascinating couple of posts on the growing issue of Siri's 'anti-chocie politics'.  Siri, as many of you will know, is the talking assistant included with Apple's new iPhone 4S.

The commentary stems from a piece on the site 'The Raw Story' in which Siri was revealed to be helpful with many things, but not when it comes to obtaining an abortion. According to the piece, ask the Siri, the new iPhone 4 assistant, where to get an abortion, and, if you happen to be in Washington, D.C., she won’t direct you to the Planned Parenthood on 16th St, NW. Instead, she’ll suggest you pay a visit to the 1st Choice Women’s Health Center, an anti-abortion Crisis Pregnancy Center (CPC) in Landsdowne, Virginia, or Human Life Services, a CPC in York, Pennsylvania. Ask Google the same question, and you’ll get ads for no less than 7 metro-area abortion clinics, 2 CPCs and a nationwide abortion referral service. Ask in New York City, and Siri will tell you “I didn’t find any abortion clinics.”

The piece notes that Siri can help with the following questions (a game everyone plays when they first receive their iPhone 4S):

1. Viagra.
2. Hospitals to go to if you’ve had an erection lasting for more than 5 hours.
3. Places you might be able to score marijuana.
4. Where to dump a body: in Brooklyn, it recommends a smelting plant in New Jersey.
5. The meaning of life: Siri will alternately quote from Douglas Adams (42) or Monty Python’s “The Meaning Of Life.”
6. What to do if a hamster is caught in your rectum: in D.C., she’ll direct you to Charming Cherries Escort Service.
7. Asked how to obtain a free blow job in D.C., she’ll direct you to the same escort service. (We doubt that they are free.)
8. If you’d like to see a naked woman in Brooklyn, Siri will suggest a variety of Manhattan-based strip clubs.
9. If you’re in Queens and seeking breast implants, she’ll recommend 4 local plastic surgeons.
10. But if you ask Siri about vaginoplasty, she’ll scold you about your language.

The piece also includes a note from another reader who asked Siri why it was anti-abortion, to which the answer came: "I just am, Kristen." Read that piece in full here.

There's now an online petition to Apple stating: 'Apple: Stop promoting anti-choice extremists. If a user asks for family planning services, they should be directed to a group that offers full services, like Planned Parenthood--not to a hard-right clinic with an extremist agenda.'

You can sign the petition here.

However, in the last hour Apple have responded to this concern, releasing a statement which according to Mashable states: “These are not intentional omissions meant to offend anyone. It simply means that as we bring Siri from beta to a final product, we find places where we can do better and we will in the coming weeks.”

So that's OK then.  Abortion comes to Siri soon.  Plus, there's those distracting Apple TV rumours to keep you thinking happy Apple thoughts (said the man the typing this on an iMac).

Beware the Pedobear!

Pedobear, Pedobear, does whatever a Pedobear does...as Homer Simpson didn't quite sing.

Some of you might remember a Brass Eye Paedophile special from a few years back in which they satirised the way the media and politicians were treating the subject of paedophilia.  Readers in the UK can watch that episode via 4OD (check it out here).  Even Chris Morris and Brass Eye couldn't make up a story that appears on the Huffington Post today surrounding the latest twist in the 'Pedobear' saga.

This is a cartoon bear originally intended as a joke on paedophiles, acting as a (strangely cute) representation of a paedophile.  However, the image apparently then became re-owned by paedophiles as a symbol of pride.  However - and you couldn't make this up - the New Mexico Attorney General's Office is now investigating following a surge in sightings of bear depictions on vehicles.  They apparently fear - don't laugh at the back - that this may suggest an increase in sex offender behaviour in the Albuquerque area.  Fascinating and bonkers in equal measure.  Check out the full story here.  The HuffPo piece helpfully points out that 'It is not illegal for people to display the Pedobear image in public.'  Well if it was, there would be an amazing first amendment case to bring.  It could finish poor Justice Scalia off!

The piece also explains that 'Some people may be displaying them as a joke, but the attorney general's office said they are taking the bear images seriously and are trying to get the word out.'  Look out for them in Halfords!
 
Copyright © 2014 Law and Sexuality. Designed by OddThemes | Distributed By Gooyaabi Templates