Handbook of Political Citizenship and Social Movements 2014
DOI: 10.4337/9781781954706.00011
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Citizenship, gender and sexuality

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…They also refer to approaches such as 'feminist citizenship', 'reproductive citizenship', 'intimate citizenship', 'biocitizenship', 'consumer citizenship', 'legal citizenship', and 'national and trans-national citizenship'. 35 While human rights discourses and legal approaches are central in the three reviewed knowledge fields, the citizenship concept seems to be less used in intersex activism and human rights discourses. I only found a mention of 'citizenship rights' in some of the reviewed activist declarations, and no mention of the citizenship concept in the reviewed human rights documents apart from a use of the term "citizenship card" related to the administrative procedure of modifying sex markers (UN 2023, p. 19).…”
Section: Citizenship Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They also refer to approaches such as 'feminist citizenship', 'reproductive citizenship', 'intimate citizenship', 'biocitizenship', 'consumer citizenship', 'legal citizenship', and 'national and trans-national citizenship'. 35 While human rights discourses and legal approaches are central in the three reviewed knowledge fields, the citizenship concept seems to be less used in intersex activism and human rights discourses. I only found a mention of 'citizenship rights' in some of the reviewed activist declarations, and no mention of the citizenship concept in the reviewed human rights documents apart from a use of the term "citizenship card" related to the administrative procedure of modifying sex markers (UN 2023, p. 19).…”
Section: Citizenship Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LGBTþ movements have revealed the hegemonic (Monro and Richardson, 2014) and/or compulsory (Rich, 1980) heterosexuality underlying citizenship, demonstrating how citizens are "normatively constructed as (hetero)sexual subjects" (Richardson, 2005, p. 65) and, therefore, how heteronormativity serves as a line of inclusion/exclusion in western national communities, along with racialization and class (Brandzel, 2005).…”
Section: The Struggle For Citizenship Rights and The Claim For Recogn...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LGBTþ claims for citizenship rights have developed over the past four decades, oscillating between liberationist (through a radical critique of the dominant heterosexual structure) and inclusionist thrusts (claims to recognize the same rights as heterosexual people in the frame of a human rights discourse, without questioning their heteronormative matrix) (Monro and Richardson, 2014;Prearo, 2015;Belle `et al, 2018). It is within the frame of the latter that the concept of sexual citizenship has developed, understood as the set of sexual rights claims inherent in the state's recognition of freedom of expression, bodily autonomy and social inclusion, affective and sexual relationships and freedom from violence (Monro and Richardson, 2014;Richardson, 2017). We can therefore argue that the claim for (sexual) citizenship by LGBTþ movements is a form of collective "coming out" through the uncovering and denunciation of the structural violence by the subjects hitherto rendered victim and invisible by it.…”
Section: The Struggle For Citizenship Rights and The Claim For Recogn...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The binary gender model, or cisgender model, is implicit in most feminist discussions of citizenship; Sanger observes ‘gender is still understood, both theoretically and culturally, as adhering to the dualism of male/female’ (Sanger, 2008: 41). Monro (2005) and Monro and Richardson (2014), as well as Van der Ros (2013b), critique the gender-binaried nature of feminist approaches to citizenship, arguing for the acknowledgement of gender diversity in terms of citizenship claims, rights and obligations.…”
Section: Transgender Citizenship: Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%