--->AAG - 2011 Annual Meeting, Seattle, Washington Overview | AAG Annual Meeting
Association of Amerian Geographers LogoAssociation of American Geographers - Annual Meeting
Register to Attend About the Meeting Schedule and Program Jobs Center Call for Papers Grants & Awards Get Involved For Exhibitors and Sponsors
Abstract Title:
Public Duty and Private Prejudice

is part of the Paper Session:
'New' gendered and sexual politics for 'new' equalities landscapes? Session 2

scheduled on Thursday, 4/14/2011 at 10:00 AM.

Author(s):
Diane Richardson, Professor* - Newcastle University, UK
Surya Monro, Dr. - University of Huddersfield, UK

Abstract:
Legislative and policy development in the formation of new sexualities equalities have prompted debate into the effects on social institutions  like family and marriage, on belonging and identity, as well as governmentality, intersectionality and models of citizenship. Underlying these debates is the broader question of how in increasingly diverse/plural neoliberal democracies a model of universal citizenship based on equality as similitude can be maintained. As I argue, this involves a complex economy of 'seeing and not seeing' difference, where two forms of recognition are in play. Recognition of the right to belong and be assimilated into public life as part of the 'common good' and, at the same time, recognition of difference that is typically privatised. These policy shifts are, then, associated with a particular model of citizenship and 'politics of recognition', where there is an emphasis on individual and not group rights and the mobilisation of particular forms of governance of difference that perpetuate individualism. Linked to this, the making of citizens has become increasingly privatised, within a neoliberal discourse that depoliticizes as it individualises and privatizes. I consider how the implementation of sexualities equalities policies is related to processes of privatisation and individualisation. This is illustrated by drawing on  findings from an ESRC funded study of LGBT equalities initiatives in the UK, which examined the views of those who now have a public duty to implement recent legislative and policy shifts and  are obliged to develop equalities initiatives concerning 'sexual orientation' and gender reassignment.

Keywords:

sexuality, citizenship, equality, neoliberalism


(56) 2011 Annual Meeting, Seattle, Washington