covid - 19地域:反对或关注改变性和性别立法和文化的人的活动和维权活动

IF 2.4 2区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY Social & Cultural Geography Pub Date : 2022-08-24 DOI:10.1080/14649365.2022.2110932
Katherine Browne, C. Nash
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要2019冠状病毒病对社会的影响具有内在的地域性。这场疫情不仅加深了先前存在的不平等,并进一步孤立了依赖物理空间的群体,如LGBTQ人群,还需要重组包括激进主义在内的多种形式的时空关系。通过2021年初的采访和问卷调查,我们探讨了新冠肺炎19对加拿大、大不列颠及爱尔兰那些对性取向和性别相关的社会法律变化表示担忧和反对的人的活动的影响。参与者对新冠肺炎制度(封锁和限制)影响的看法突出了四个关键趋势。首先,最大的一组受访者认为他们的观点/活动是不变的。其次,一些与会者注意到脱离了性政治和性别政治。第三,那些在新冠肺炎之前/期间是活动家的人19指出,由于失去了面对面的互动,他们在继续在线活动方面面临挑战,以及他们如何协商新的空间。最后,对一些参与者来说,新冠肺炎制度意味着要么新参与,要么增加他们在疫情前的积极性,有时间进行“研究”和发展他们的活动。需要进一步的工作来调查我们的发现是否与其他参与其他形式激进主义的群体相似,以及新冠肺炎地理对激进主义19的纵向影响和影响。
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COVID19 geographies: activities and activisms of those opposed to or concerned about changes to sexual and gendered legislation and cultures
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.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
16.00%
发文量
99
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