Building on emerging research on ‘gay-friendly’ organisations, this article examines if and how work contexts understood and experienced as ‘gay-friendly’ can be characterised as exhibiting a serious breakdown in heteronormativity. Taking the performing arts as a research setting, one that is often stereotyped as ‘gay-friendly’, and drawing on in-depth interview data with 20 gay male performers in the UK, this article examines how everyday activities and encounters involving drama school educators, casters and peers are informed by heteronormative standards of gay male sexuality. One concern is that heteronormative constructions of gay male sexualities constrain participants’ access to work; suggesting limits to the abilities and roles gay...
This article explores how gay and lesbian identities are incorporated, or not, into the roles and ro...
Taking human resource development as its primary context, this article asks, ‘How can scholars mobil...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to build upon the paucity of UK research on gay men and how t...
Building on emerging research on ‘gay-friendly’ organisations, this article examines if and how wor...
This paper contributes to a neglected topic area about lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people’s emp...
This thesis explores the working realities of gay police officers and performers in relation to ‘gay...
This chapter argues that particular invocations of workplaces as ‘gay-friendly’, typically those fra...
This article problematises sexual inclusion in the workplace by theorising the social and historical...
This chapter argues that the critical organisational scholarship on men and masculinities is heteron...
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
This paper problematises sexual inclusion in the workplace by theorising the social and historical p...
This article problematizes sexual inclusion in the workplace by theorising the social and historical...
PhDIn the UK, as in many western nations, there have been a number of progressive pieces of legislat...
Drawing upon pro-feminist and poststructuralist feminist research which has scrutinised masculinitie...
This article discusses how the organisational literature on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (...
This article explores how gay and lesbian identities are incorporated, or not, into the roles and ro...
Taking human resource development as its primary context, this article asks, ‘How can scholars mobil...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to build upon the paucity of UK research on gay men and how t...
Building on emerging research on ‘gay-friendly’ organisations, this article examines if and how wor...
This paper contributes to a neglected topic area about lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people’s emp...
This thesis explores the working realities of gay police officers and performers in relation to ‘gay...
This chapter argues that particular invocations of workplaces as ‘gay-friendly’, typically those fra...
This article problematises sexual inclusion in the workplace by theorising the social and historical...
This chapter argues that the critical organisational scholarship on men and masculinities is heteron...
Despite sustained focus in recent years on understanding the experiences of underrepresented groups ...
This paper problematises sexual inclusion in the workplace by theorising the social and historical p...
This article problematizes sexual inclusion in the workplace by theorising the social and historical...
PhDIn the UK, as in many western nations, there have been a number of progressive pieces of legislat...
Drawing upon pro-feminist and poststructuralist feminist research which has scrutinised masculinitie...
This article discusses how the organisational literature on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (...
This article explores how gay and lesbian identities are incorporated, or not, into the roles and ro...
Taking human resource development as its primary context, this article asks, ‘How can scholars mobil...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to build upon the paucity of UK research on gay men and how t...