Recent surveys showing LGBT professionals’ heightened experience of homophobia on building site visits can be considered in the context of a growing body of literature on the gender and sexual identity in construction work. This analysis offers a theoretical perspective on the practical issues, examining the embodied nature of professionalism and the performative nature of the construction site visit: an instance where an intertwined personal/professional identity is on parade, confronting the dominant identities of the site, and thus itself challenged. The work draws on Goffman’s theories of social interaction and the works of Bourdieu on the nature of practice
This thesis begins with an examination of the construction of knowledge within tourism studies. I ar...
Identity issues are under-explored in construction management. We provide a brief introduction to th...
This article is a study of professional identity work, using in-depth interview material from resear...
Over the last three years the New Civil Engineer, Architects’ Journal and Construction News have con...
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
A qualitative investigation into the experiences of LGBT workers in the construction secto
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
This qualitative study contributes to knowledge about the strategies women use to establish their pr...
The topic of gender in the construction industry now commands a substantial literature given complai...
Drawing on 63 interviews with a diverse sample of tradeswomen, this article examines how the cultura...
The purpose of this chapter is to explore the discursive nature of how gay men make sense of themsel...
This chapter argues that particular invocations of workplaces as ‘gay-friendly’, typically those fra...
Architecture is a medium, which through design can include or exclude participation and engagement. ...
Intersectionality is a much-debated concept within gender and race studies, but there are few empiri...
This thesis begins with an examination of the construction of knowledge within tourism studies. I ar...
Identity issues are under-explored in construction management. We provide a brief introduction to th...
This article is a study of professional identity work, using in-depth interview material from resear...
Over the last three years the New Civil Engineer, Architects’ Journal and Construction News have con...
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
A qualitative investigation into the experiences of LGBT workers in the construction secto
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
This qualitative study contributes to knowledge about the strategies women use to establish their pr...
The topic of gender in the construction industry now commands a substantial literature given complai...
Drawing on 63 interviews with a diverse sample of tradeswomen, this article examines how the cultura...
The purpose of this chapter is to explore the discursive nature of how gay men make sense of themsel...
This chapter argues that particular invocations of workplaces as ‘gay-friendly’, typically those fra...
Architecture is a medium, which through design can include or exclude participation and engagement. ...
Intersectionality is a much-debated concept within gender and race studies, but there are few empiri...
This thesis begins with an examination of the construction of knowledge within tourism studies. I ar...
Identity issues are under-explored in construction management. We provide a brief introduction to th...
This article is a study of professional identity work, using in-depth interview material from resear...