Finding Work in the Age of LGBTQ plus Equalities: Labor Market Experiences of Queer and Trans Workers in Deindustrializing Cities

被引:5
作者
Mills, Suzanne [1 ,2 ]
Oswin, Natalie [3 ]
机构
[1] McMaster Univ, Sch Labour Studies, Hamilton, ON L8S 4S8, Canada
[2] McMaster Univ, Sch Earth Environm & Soc, Hamilton, ON L8S 4S8, Canada
[3] Univ Toronto, Dept Human Geog, Toronto, ON M1C 1A4, Canada
关键词
transgender; gender; queer; deindustrialization; nonbinary; labor market; trans; GENDER; GAY; DISCRIMINATION; SEGMENTATION; GEOGRAPHIES; TRANSGENDER; EMPLOYEES; MIGRATION; IMPACT; YOUNG;
D O I
10.1080/00130095.2023.2290479
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Despite legal protections and growing acceptance in many industrialized countries, LGBTQ + workers continue to face considerable employment disadvantage. We explain this contradiction by detailing labor market processes that limit employment prospects for LGBTQ + workers in Sudbury and Windsor (both small cities with industrial histories). Drawing on 50 semistructured interviews and 662 community survey responses from LGBTQ + workers, we show how LGBTQ + employment opportunities are constrained by a constellation of multiscalar factors. These include the absence of good work opportunities outside of blue-collar work in deindustrializing labor markets, associated persistent cisnormativity and heteronormativity, and inconsistent protection from discrimination and social acceptance at work. As a result, respondents self-selected out of blue-collar workplaces, avoided and left jobs when they experienced or anticipated discrimination, and chose to remain in jobs with supportive employers rather than find a new job in a potentially homophobic or transphobic labor market. This article extends current understandings of labor markets economic geography by connecting production histories to persistent cisnormativity and heteronormitivity, and by showing how the search for emotional safety in cities with inconsistent social acceptance perpetuates economic disadvantage for queer and trans workers.
引用
收藏
页码:170 / 190
页数:21
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