This paper is about the construction of space and place in the urban imaginary. It draws on multidisciplinary empirical research—on Violence, Sexuality and Space—conducted in a place that was simultaneously represented in one of the most controversial programmes ever to be screened on British television— Queer as Folk. As the television programme intervened in the responses from the interviews and focus groups, we begin, through an exploration of spatial referents and characterisation, to explore the `authentic' underpinning for the queer imaginary. We examine the sexual politics of place and space as a politics of verisimilitude, affectivity and political claims-making.
It is well-known that lesbians and gay men have long been produced and examined as objects of fear. However, this article analyses lesbians and gay men as subjects of fear. This paper offers an exploration of the formation and uses of fear in the context of lesbian and gay experiences of danger and safety associated with violence. In so doing it explores the politics and geography of fear that inform lesbian and gay perceptions of danger and safety. The evidence provided is based upon an analysis of an established and a non-established arena of lesbian and gay performance and visibility/invisibility.
In: Sutherland , W J , Goulden , C , Bell , K , Bennett , F , Burall , S , Bush , M , Callan , S , Catcheside , K , Corner , J , D'arcy , C T , Dickson , M , Dolan , J A , Doubleday , R , Eckley , B J , Foreman , E T , Foster , R , Gilhooly , L , Gray , A M , Hall , A C , Harmer , M , Hastings , A , Johnes , C , Johnstone , M , Kelly , P , Kenway , P , Lee , N , Moore , R , Ouchikh , J , Plunkett , J , Rowlingson , K , Paul , A S , Sefton , T A J , Shaheen , F , Sodha , S , Stearn , J , Stewart , K , Stone , E , Tinsley , M , Tomsett , R J , Tyrer , P , Unwin , J , Wall , D G & Wollner , P K A 2013 , ' 100 Questions : Identifying research priorities for poverty prevention and reduction ' , Journal of Poverty and Social Justice , vol. 21 , no. 3 , pp. 189-205 . https://doi.org/10.1332/175982713X671210
Reducing poverty is important for those affected, for society and the economy. Poverty remains entrenched in the UK, despite considerable research efforts to understand its causes and possible solutions. The Joseph Rowntree Foundation, with the Centre for Science and Policy at the University of Cambridge, ran a democratic, transparent, consensual exercise involving 45 participants from government, non-governmental organisations, academia and research to identify 100 important research questions that, if answered, would help to reduce or prevent poverty. The list includes questions across a number of important themes, including attitudes, education, family, employment, heath, wellbeing, inclusion, markets, housing, taxes, inequality and power.
Reducing poverty is important for those affected, for society and the economy. Poverty remains entrenched in the UK, despite considerable research efforts to understand its causes and possible solutions. The Joseph Rowntree Foundation, with the Centre for Science and Policy at the University of Cambridge, ran a democratic, transparent, consensual exercise involving 45 participants from government, non-governmental organisations, academia and research to identify 100 important research questions that, if answered, would help to reduce or prevent poverty. The list includes questions across a number of important themes, including attitudes, education, family, employment, heath, wellbeing, inclusion, markets, housing, taxes, inequality and power.