Understanding Queer Oppression and Resistance in the Global Economy: Towards a Theoretical Framework for Political Economy

被引:12
作者
Gore, Ellie [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sheffield, Sheffield Polit Econ Res Inst, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England
关键词
Queer theory; feminist political economy; LGBTI activism; sexuality; Ghana; SOCIAL REPRODUCTION; GENDER; SEX; SEXUALITY; THINKING; MATTERS;
D O I
10.1080/13563467.2021.1952558
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The study of sexuality, especially queer sexuality, has occupied a historically marginal position within political economy. Where feminist scholars have addressed the topic, they have typically done so through the lens of women's sexual labour and social reproduction and/or by framing sexual orientation and gender identity as a variable through which patterns of differentiation may occur. Most critical political economy ignores sexuality entirely. As a result, matters of queer oppression and resistance have not been systematically investigated or theorised. This paper addresses this gap by fusing together insights from the emergent 'queering IPE' literature with two other strands of scholarship that integrate queer concerns into the study of global capitalism: the 'globalisation' and 'state-centric' frames. Based on this, I propose a theoretical framework for understanding queer struggle and apply this to the analysis of LGBTI politics and activism in Ghana. The paper argues that queer oppression and resistance are important topics of inquiry in and of themselves in political economy. At the same time, a broader ontological shift is required to recognise the constitutive role of sexuality within political economic phenomena, which has potentially far-reaching implications for future research agendas within and beyond the study of queer politics.
引用
收藏
页码:296 / 311
页数:16
相关论文
共 38 条
[21]   Socialist worldmaking: The political economy of urban comparison in the Global Cold War [J].
Stanek, Lukasz .
URBAN STUDIES, 2022, 59 (08) :1575-1596
[22]   Towards a Greater Understanding of the Prevalence of Immigrant Entrepreneurship in the Informal Economy of Ghana: An Institutional Theory Perspective [J].
Adom, Kwame ;
Ackom, Benjamin .
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN BUSINESS, 2024, 25 (02) :264-286
[23]   Towards a Liberal Behavioural Political Economy: The Constitutional Approach and the Role of Capable Agency [J].
Dold, Malte ;
Lewis, Paul .
REVIEW OF BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS, 2024, 11 (02) :183-209
[24]   #MeToo, white feminism and taking everyday politics seriously in the global political economy [J].
Griffin, Penny .
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2019, 54 (04) :556-572
[25]   Understanding women's experience of violence and the political economy of gender in conflict: the case of Syria [J].
Alsaba, Khuloud ;
Kapilashrami, Anuj .
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH MATTERS, 2016, 24 (47) :5-17
[26]   Towards a Political Economy of Social Infrastructure: Contesting "Anti-Social Infrastructures" in London [J].
Horton, Amy ;
Penny, Joe .
ANTIPODE, 2023, 55 (06) :1711-1734
[28]   Moral political economy and moral reasoning about rural India: four theoretical schools compared [J].
Olsen, Wendy .
CAMBRIDGE JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2009, 33 (05) :875-902
[29]   Political economy framework and the occurrence of noncommunicable diseases. "Framing dietary practices in Ghana as the receptacle" [J].
Kwasi, Brenyah Joseph ;
Koranteng, Tannor Elliot ;
Florence, Brenyah ;
Anthony, Edusei .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES, 2021, 6 (03) :122-128
[30]   Global political economy and Frontier economies in Africa: Implications from the oil and gas industry in Ghana [J].
Obeng-Odoom, Franklin .
ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2015, 10 :41-56