About this book series

The Global Queer Politics book series is a new outlet for research on political and social processes that contest dominant heteronormative orders in both legal and policy frames and cultural formations. It presents studies encompassing all aspects of queer politics, understood in the expansive terms of much activism as addressing the politics of sexual orientation, gender identity and expression and intersex status, as well as non-heteronormative sexualities and genders more widely – including emerging identities such as asexual, pansexual, or non-binary. As struggles over violence, human rights and inequalities have become more prominent in world politics, this series provides a forum to challenge retrenchments of inequalities, and new forms of contestation, criminalization and persecution, situated in wider geopolitics. Particularly welcome are works attentive to multiple inequalities, such as related to class and caste, race and ethnicity, nationalism, religion, disability and age, imperialism and colonialism. Global, regional, transnational, comparative and national studies are welcome, but that speak to international processes.

Books in the Global Queer Politics series will initially be published  in hardback and ebook formats, and are made available in paperback after two years. Ebook package subscriptions for libraries in less developed countries are in accessible scaled rates relative to the size and location of institutions, enabling free access to library patrons. Additionally these package subscriptions make it possible for library patrons to purchase personal paperback editions of each book when it is released, through the MyCopy scheme.

The Global Queer Politics book series welcomes:

All academic disciplines and approaches that can contribute to the study of politics, including, but not limited to, international relations, political theory, sociology, socio-legal studies, contemporary history, social policy, development, public policy, cultural studies, media studies and gender and sexuality studies.

Methodologies which may include comparative works and case studies with relevant transnational dimensions, and analyses of global processes. Research from authors who have activist, governmental and international experience, as well as work that can contribute to the global debate over LGBTIQ rights with perspectives from the Global South.'

Editors:

Jordi Díez, University of Guelph, Canada: jdiez@uoguelph.ca

Sonia Corrêa, Brazilian Interdisciplinary Association for AIDS, Brazil: scorrea@abiaids.org.br

David Paternotte, Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium: David.Paternotte@ulb.ac.be

Matthew Waites, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom: Matthew.Waites@glasgow.ac.uk

Advisory Board: 


Sa'ed Atshan, Swarthmore College, United States

Kelly Kollman, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom

Travis Kong, Hong Kong University, China

Arvind Narrain, Alternative Law Forum, India

Stella Nyanzi, Makerere University, Uganda

Hakan Seckinelgin, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom

Shanon Shah, Inform, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom

María-Amelia Viteri, Universidad San Francisco de

Quito, Ecuador/Fordham University, United States

Cai Wilkinson, Deakin University, Australia





Electronic ISSN
2569-1309
Print ISSN
2569-1317
Series Editor
  • Jordi Díez,
  • Sonia Corrêa,
  • David Paternotte,
  • Matthew Waites

Book titles in this series

  1. Queer/Muslim/Canadian

    Identities, Experiences and Belonging

    Editors:
    • Momin Rahman
    • Maryam Khan
    • Copyright: 2024

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • eBook
  2. Queer Diplomacy

    Homophobia, International Relations and LGBT Human Rights

    Authors:
    • Douglas Victor Janoff
    • Copyright: 2022

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • Soft cover
    • eBook

Abstracted and indexed in

  1. SCOPUS