Purpose: To introduce critical gender theory to events studies and set an agenda for research in this area. This paper focuses on various contexts, approaches, and applications for 'doing gender' in critical event studies. It draws upon interdisciplinary frameworks to develop robust theoretical ways of interrogating issues related to power and structural inequalities in events contexts. Design/methodology/approach: A conceptual discussion of ‘doing gender’ and critical gender theory and review of relevant research in this area within event studies. Adopting feminist and intersectional perspectives and applying them to events environments has potential to inform current theoretical developments and wider sector practices, and, ultimately, ch...
This paper explores the action of attending a visiting academic’s one-off lecture, whether in the le...
This essay is a postscript to a journal special issue on gender and tourism. In this postscript it ...
This paper seeks to rouse debate about the workings of tourism enquiry as a knowledge-generating sys...
Exploring the relationship between gender and events, this book delivers an ethnographic analysis of...
Purpose: This conceptual paper aims to contribute to the extant tourism and gender literature by hig...
Critical Peace and Conflict Studies (PCS) as a field cares about gender. Yet, feminist work frequent...
This paper seeks to rouse debate about the workings of tourism enquiry as a knowledge-generating sys...
This introductory chapter argues that liminality as conceived by van Gennep (1960) and, subsequently...
To encourage methodological pluralism in the field, this paper examines an illustrative sample of ar...
Applying a transformative consumer research (TCR) perspective urges scholars to adopt a critical pra...
Most early social research into planned events had the effect of broadcasting narratives of dominant...
The extensive significance of feminist and gender research clearly does not need demonstrating to t...
This essay is an introduction to a journal Special Issue on Gender and Tourism. It examines the sta...
On Wednesday 27 September 2017, LSE Gender PhD students organised an event titled Why feminism? An o...
This dissertation project seeks to address the sociological processes, dynamics, and mechanisms infl...
This paper explores the action of attending a visiting academic’s one-off lecture, whether in the le...
This essay is a postscript to a journal special issue on gender and tourism. In this postscript it ...
This paper seeks to rouse debate about the workings of tourism enquiry as a knowledge-generating sys...
Exploring the relationship between gender and events, this book delivers an ethnographic analysis of...
Purpose: This conceptual paper aims to contribute to the extant tourism and gender literature by hig...
Critical Peace and Conflict Studies (PCS) as a field cares about gender. Yet, feminist work frequent...
This paper seeks to rouse debate about the workings of tourism enquiry as a knowledge-generating sys...
This introductory chapter argues that liminality as conceived by van Gennep (1960) and, subsequently...
To encourage methodological pluralism in the field, this paper examines an illustrative sample of ar...
Applying a transformative consumer research (TCR) perspective urges scholars to adopt a critical pra...
Most early social research into planned events had the effect of broadcasting narratives of dominant...
The extensive significance of feminist and gender research clearly does not need demonstrating to t...
This essay is an introduction to a journal Special Issue on Gender and Tourism. It examines the sta...
On Wednesday 27 September 2017, LSE Gender PhD students organised an event titled Why feminism? An o...
This dissertation project seeks to address the sociological processes, dynamics, and mechanisms infl...
This paper explores the action of attending a visiting academic’s one-off lecture, whether in the le...
This essay is a postscript to a journal special issue on gender and tourism. In this postscript it ...
This paper seeks to rouse debate about the workings of tourism enquiry as a knowledge-generating sys...