Increasing everyday levels of LGBTQ+ phobia and other forms of identity-based prejudice reveal the need for systematic attention across the versatile geographic discipline to the belonging and safety of LGBTQ+ field researchers. Through an expanded reflection on Bracken & Mawdsley’s (2004) account "‘Muddy glee’: Rounding out the picture of women and physical geography fieldwork” (Area, 36, pp. 280-286), we consider the major issues – including forms of discrimination, exclusion, and, sometimes, violence – that LGBTQ+ researchers (and more widely fieldworkers engaging LGBTQ+ communities) encounter at different stages of field research. We pursue a critical dialogue with opportunities and limitations provided by field, disciplinary as well as...
‘Muddy glee’ by Bracken and Mawdsley made an important contribution to highlighting gender discrimin...
Towards a theory of landscape and sexual orientation Spatial aspects of the various multicultural, l...
Although there is little research on the experiences of queer and/or transgender postsecondary stude...
Increasing everyday levels of LGBTQ+ phobia and other forms of identity-based prejudice reveal the n...
Research on sexual orientation and gender identities, such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, a...
Fieldwork, including work done at sea, is a key component of many geoscientists' careers. Recent stu...
This report considers genders and sexualities within and across spaces of activism. Geographers conc...
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) scientists are an invisible minority that sti...
This chapter explores the possibilities (and problems) arising from a multi-sited ethnographic study...
This article argues identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer and/or quest...
Fieldwork is integral to studying Geography. It is recognized in the QAA Subject Benchmark (2022) an...
Over the past 20 years, sociological research on LGBTQ people and communities has disproportionately...
The spatial experiences of transgender and gender non-conforming (“trans”) people continue to occupy...
This article explores the role of reflexivity, emotion work and insider/outsider researcher status i...
In recent years geographers have started to re-engage with issues of exclusion, social justice and ...
‘Muddy glee’ by Bracken and Mawdsley made an important contribution to highlighting gender discrimin...
Towards a theory of landscape and sexual orientation Spatial aspects of the various multicultural, l...
Although there is little research on the experiences of queer and/or transgender postsecondary stude...
Increasing everyday levels of LGBTQ+ phobia and other forms of identity-based prejudice reveal the n...
Research on sexual orientation and gender identities, such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, a...
Fieldwork, including work done at sea, is a key component of many geoscientists' careers. Recent stu...
This report considers genders and sexualities within and across spaces of activism. Geographers conc...
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) scientists are an invisible minority that sti...
This chapter explores the possibilities (and problems) arising from a multi-sited ethnographic study...
This article argues identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer and/or quest...
Fieldwork is integral to studying Geography. It is recognized in the QAA Subject Benchmark (2022) an...
Over the past 20 years, sociological research on LGBTQ people and communities has disproportionately...
The spatial experiences of transgender and gender non-conforming (“trans”) people continue to occupy...
This article explores the role of reflexivity, emotion work and insider/outsider researcher status i...
In recent years geographers have started to re-engage with issues of exclusion, social justice and ...
‘Muddy glee’ by Bracken and Mawdsley made an important contribution to highlighting gender discrimin...
Towards a theory of landscape and sexual orientation Spatial aspects of the various multicultural, l...
Although there is little research on the experiences of queer and/or transgender postsecondary stude...