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Allen, Louisa – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
Is it ethical to want students to become non-queerphobic as an outcome of our teaching? This question is situated within thinking about teaching for social justice. It takes an event where a student challenges a course's queer pedagogy and thinks with it to expose 'the inherent paradox of education'. This is the notion that in its desires for…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Higher Education, LGBTQ People, Ethics
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Allen, Louisa; Cowie, Lucy; Fenaughty, John – Higher Education Research and Development, 2020
This article explores an apparent contradiction in LGBTTIQA+ students' narratives around how safe they feel on campus. While declaring they feel 'safe' and supported by other students and staff, participants' narratives contain a myriad of examples indicating they feel 'unsafe'. These incidents emerge during photo-elicitation interviews where…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Social Bias, College Environment, School Safety
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Allen, Louisa – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2020
'How can we apprehend homophobia "as more" than we currently know?' This paper attempts a conceptual intervention to rethink current approaches to homophobia in schools. It draws on ideas from feminist philosopher Todd around attention and openness to uncertainty. It also employs queer theoretical notions of subjectless antihomophobia…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Social Bias, Intervention, Feminism
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Allen, Louisa – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2020
This paper is concerned with how teachers manage homophobia at school. It examines how they deal with homophobia directed at students, "and" instances when teachers become the recipients of homophobia themselves. This dual focus, on teachers as both the perpetrators and recipients of homophobia, adds complexity to existing studies…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Teacher Characteristics, Social Bias, Teacher Attitudes
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Allen, Louisa – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2019
Homophobia is an enduring issue within schooling contexts internationally. This paper attempts to rethink homophobia from the perspective of heterosexual students' accounts of bearing witness to it. Within the existing literature it has been LGBTQ students who have held the responsibility for naming and recounting homophobia. This paper re-orients…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Social Bias, Student Attitudes, Student Role
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Howell, Tori; Allen, Louisa – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2021
This article explores the schooling experiences of 12 fa'afafine and fakaleiti who attended an all-boys faith-based secondary school in Aotearoa-New Zealand. Fa'afafine are Samoan, and fakaleiti Tongans who are assigned male at birth, but enact varying degrees and types of behaviour deemed as feminine. There are currently no in-depth qualitative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Single Sex Schools, Males, Secondary School Students
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Rasmussen, Mary Lou; Sanjakdar, Fida; Allen, Louisa; Quinlivan, Kathleen; Bromdal, Annette – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2017
Young people may face conflicting and confusing messages about what it means to respond well in relation to homophobia and transphobia. Consequently, we ask--What might it mean to respond well to homophobia and transphobia? This strategy, inspired by Anika Thiem and Judith Butler, is recognition of the ambivalent conditions which structure…
Descriptors: Social Bias, Homosexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity
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Rasmussen, Mary Lou; Allen, Louisa – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2014
In a discussion of Deleuze's theorization of concepts, Todd May asks "what can a concept do with that which cannot be identified?" Or to put it another way, May writes--"A concept is a way of addressing the difference that lies beneath the identities we experience." This is not to say that identities, concepts, and experiences…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Feminism, Social Science Research, Social Attitudes
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Allen, Louisa – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2006
This article provides a critical account of conducting focus groups with gay and lesbian youth. Drawing on the insights of queer theory it attempts to reframe issues around sexual diversity by examining the heteronormalizing processes at work during these focus groups. This analysis is undertaken through a "study of the limits" of the…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Homosexuality, Youth, Research Methodology