The South African state has responded favorably to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) social movement organizations' (SMOs) efforts to protect and extend sexual and gender minority rights, whereas Namibian state leaders have verbally attacked LGBT organizing and threatened to arrest sexual and gender minorities. In these countries, LGBT persons have organized themselves into publicly visible social movement organizations (SMOs) over the last ten years. Amid such different official responses to LGBT organizing, how, when, and why do Namibian and South African LGBT social movement organizations become publicly visible or retreat from visibility? To answer this question, I turn to sociologist James M. Jasper's (2004, 2006) concept ...
Even after decriminalization of same-sex relations, rates of violence have remained high against les...
This research examines and maps projects, organizations, and collaborations between organizations en...
This paper explores how activists across nonprofit organisations in a field made sense of and attemp...
The South African state has responded favorably to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) so...
This study addresses the apparent paradox that South Africa's gay, lesbian and bisexual (GLB) moveme...
This dissertation explains how the politics of visibility affect relations among states and the poli...
A belief among some is that the South African women's movement is fragmented and weak. Gouws notes f...
Researchers such as Hoad (2007), Ndashe (2010), Swarr (2012) and Matebeni (2014) have raised critica...
Based on archival research, in-depth interviewing, and extensive participant observation carried out...
This thesis searches to understand the role of identity in lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGBT) m...
In the last forty years, U.S. national and statewide LGBT organizations, in pursuit of “equality” th...
This dissertation examines the impact of litigation on a social movement's dominant substantive goal...
This article is interested in the national imaging and imagining of non-heteronormative genders and ...
The current social, political and legal situation of the LGBT*-communities in Namibia allows many co...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2005.This dissertation focuses on discursive constructio...
Even after decriminalization of same-sex relations, rates of violence have remained high against les...
This research examines and maps projects, organizations, and collaborations between organizations en...
This paper explores how activists across nonprofit organisations in a field made sense of and attemp...
The South African state has responded favorably to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) so...
This study addresses the apparent paradox that South Africa's gay, lesbian and bisexual (GLB) moveme...
This dissertation explains how the politics of visibility affect relations among states and the poli...
A belief among some is that the South African women's movement is fragmented and weak. Gouws notes f...
Researchers such as Hoad (2007), Ndashe (2010), Swarr (2012) and Matebeni (2014) have raised critica...
Based on archival research, in-depth interviewing, and extensive participant observation carried out...
This thesis searches to understand the role of identity in lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGBT) m...
In the last forty years, U.S. national and statewide LGBT organizations, in pursuit of “equality” th...
This dissertation examines the impact of litigation on a social movement's dominant substantive goal...
This article is interested in the national imaging and imagining of non-heteronormative genders and ...
The current social, political and legal situation of the LGBT*-communities in Namibia allows many co...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2005.This dissertation focuses on discursive constructio...
Even after decriminalization of same-sex relations, rates of violence have remained high against les...
This research examines and maps projects, organizations, and collaborations between organizations en...
This paper explores how activists across nonprofit organisations in a field made sense of and attemp...