A slowly expanding literature has examined the problem of heteronormativity in management education. Scholars converge on the view that heteronormativity is constituted in and through management education, reproducing heteronormative binaristic notions of sexuality and gender in management curricula, teaching activities, academic scholarship and business schools. This research has demonstrated the negative outcomes for lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer* (LGBTQ*) people, but questions remain about how heteronormativity is constituted as normative in management education. Addressing this, our essay demonstrates how heteronormativity is performatively constituted as normative through language, and what management educators can do to dis...
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Gender, Work & Organization published by John Wiley & Sons ...
This chapter reviews queer theory at ‘work’ within organisation studies, its reception and its conte...
This study aims to highlight the compulsory heterosexuality on business school and its relationship ...
A slowly expanding literature has examined the problem of heteronormativity in management education....
This study aims to highlight the compulsory heterosexuality on business school and its relationship ...
In this chapter then I consider how business schools might be made ‘queerer’ places to work and lear...
This paper contributes to a neglected topic area about lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people’s emp...
This article draws on queer theory to advance a research agenda that foregrounds lesbian, gay, bi an...
This research explores the confluence of knowledge, power, and heteronormativity in schools. On a co...
Taking human resource development as its primary context, this article asks, ‘How can scholars mobil...
This article explores the complex relationship between an openly gay instructor, homophobia, and het...
This article suggests new possibilities for queer theory in management and organization studies, her...
Professors often inadvertently practice heteronormative exclusion, erasing LGBT persons from lecture...
One of the key practices in school is managing knowledge and passing it on to individuals who are st...
Although schools are central places of learning and development for all youth, gender and sexually d...
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Gender, Work & Organization published by John Wiley & Sons ...
This chapter reviews queer theory at ‘work’ within organisation studies, its reception and its conte...
This study aims to highlight the compulsory heterosexuality on business school and its relationship ...
A slowly expanding literature has examined the problem of heteronormativity in management education....
This study aims to highlight the compulsory heterosexuality on business school and its relationship ...
In this chapter then I consider how business schools might be made ‘queerer’ places to work and lear...
This paper contributes to a neglected topic area about lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people’s emp...
This article draws on queer theory to advance a research agenda that foregrounds lesbian, gay, bi an...
This research explores the confluence of knowledge, power, and heteronormativity in schools. On a co...
Taking human resource development as its primary context, this article asks, ‘How can scholars mobil...
This article explores the complex relationship between an openly gay instructor, homophobia, and het...
This article suggests new possibilities for queer theory in management and organization studies, her...
Professors often inadvertently practice heteronormative exclusion, erasing LGBT persons from lecture...
One of the key practices in school is managing knowledge and passing it on to individuals who are st...
Although schools are central places of learning and development for all youth, gender and sexually d...
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Gender, Work & Organization published by John Wiley & Sons ...
This chapter reviews queer theory at ‘work’ within organisation studies, its reception and its conte...
This study aims to highlight the compulsory heterosexuality on business school and its relationship ...