This article analyses Houria Bouteldja’s conceptualisation of decolonial feminism as a product of the queer (af)filiations between past and present socio-cultural, linguistic, and epistemological resources and as productive of dynamic, but also strained, transactions across generations, epistemologies, and material realities traversing a variety of local and global geographies. This analysis is framed in reference to specific social, cultural, political, sexual, and linguistic anxieties that inform the socio-political stances adopted in Houria Bouteldja’s ideological investments in the decolonial generally and in decolonial feminism specifically. Finally, the article will propose the notion of queer (af)filiations as a productive interface ...
This article proposes a new critical framework for analysing transnational human rights-claiming and...
As a space of encounter and exchange, the Mediterranean is a complex region due to its diverse histo...
This article builds upon queer feminist and decolonial/TWAIL interventions into the history of inter...
This article recognises that any attempt to theorise the first wave globally must specify the use of...
This article highlights the ways that queer criminology appears to be invested in, and reflective of...
In this special issue of Interventions, we consider the transnational articulations of the expansive...
In this chapter I draw on a Leverhulme funded research project of listening to migrant and refugee w...
Abstract This article proposes a re-reading of the problem of gender, or as it has been put, more of...
Queer theory offers itself as radical epistemology to uncover pervasive forms of power, not only aro...
To be ‘politically queer’ at the beginning of the 1990s indicated opposition to the policing of iden...
This article argues that lesbians “of color” in France are creating new decolonial subjectivities an...
This paper offers an initial discussion of the extent to which queer criminology is invested in sett...
Book synopsis: Decolonizing Sexualities brings together creative, activist and scholarly contributio...
Book synopsis: Decolonizing Sexualities brings together creative, activist and scholarly contributio...
Decolonial queer knowledges enact the practice of visual aesthetics through an embodiment of desire,...
This article proposes a new critical framework for analysing transnational human rights-claiming and...
As a space of encounter and exchange, the Mediterranean is a complex region due to its diverse histo...
This article builds upon queer feminist and decolonial/TWAIL interventions into the history of inter...
This article recognises that any attempt to theorise the first wave globally must specify the use of...
This article highlights the ways that queer criminology appears to be invested in, and reflective of...
In this special issue of Interventions, we consider the transnational articulations of the expansive...
In this chapter I draw on a Leverhulme funded research project of listening to migrant and refugee w...
Abstract This article proposes a re-reading of the problem of gender, or as it has been put, more of...
Queer theory offers itself as radical epistemology to uncover pervasive forms of power, not only aro...
To be ‘politically queer’ at the beginning of the 1990s indicated opposition to the policing of iden...
This article argues that lesbians “of color” in France are creating new decolonial subjectivities an...
This paper offers an initial discussion of the extent to which queer criminology is invested in sett...
Book synopsis: Decolonizing Sexualities brings together creative, activist and scholarly contributio...
Book synopsis: Decolonizing Sexualities brings together creative, activist and scholarly contributio...
Decolonial queer knowledges enact the practice of visual aesthetics through an embodiment of desire,...
This article proposes a new critical framework for analysing transnational human rights-claiming and...
As a space of encounter and exchange, the Mediterranean is a complex region due to its diverse histo...
This article builds upon queer feminist and decolonial/TWAIL interventions into the history of inter...