(Re)imagining research, activism, and rights at the intersections of sexuality, health, and social justice

被引:0
|
作者
Dutta, Debolina [1 ,2 ]
Murray, Laura [3 ]
Oliveira, Elsa [4 ]
Parker, Richard [5 ,6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Jindal Global Law Sch, Sonipat, India
[2] Harvard Law Sch, Inst Global Law & Policy, Cambridge, MA USA
[3] Univ Fed Rio deJaneiro UFRJ, Nucleo Polit Publ Direitos Humanos NEPP DH, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
[4] Univ Witwatersrand, African Ctr Migrat & Soc ACMS, Johannesburg, South Africa
[5] Columbia Univ, Dept Sociomed Sci, New York, NY USA
[6] ABIA Assoc Brasileira Interdisciplinar AIDS, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
[7] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro UFRJ, Inst Estudos Saude Colet IESC, LIDHS Lab Interdisciplinar Direitos Humanos & Sau, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
关键词
Knowledge production; activism; participatory research; social justice; sexuality; REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE; POLITICS; CHOICE; STATES; WOMEN;
D O I
10.1080/17441692.2022.2115097
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
The Covid-19 pandemic inaugurated a new global order of public life and health marked by death, despair and alienation. As a crisis of a global scale, it made the task of (re)imagination simultaneously necessary and extremely difficult. It is this double bind of the difficulty and imminence of imagination that motivates the curation of this special issue. In this introduction, we map the connections between the theme of this volume and the key ideas that constitute its varied contributions, which we organised under three broad mobilising ideas: Rights and Resilience; Sexuality, Health and Justice; and Politics of Knowledge Production and Collaborations. Contributions cover myriad issues, engage in methodological innovations and play with diverse genres. Alongside more traditional academic writings, there are community-based research papers, activist conversations, visual essays, reflective pieces and interviews. The geographical span of the contributions brings insights from around the world and the number of topics covered in this issue are equally vast including, among others, mental health, disability, environment, sex work, violence, queerness, LGBTQ+ experiences, love and anger. The aim of this special issue, then, is to challenge the Manichean distinctions that are often drawn between research and activism, and by extension, between theory and practice.
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页码:2223 / 2234
页数:12
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