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BIRKBECK INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH INTIMATE CITIZENSHIP RESEARCH GROUP INVITES YOU TO A BOOK LAUNCH TO CELEBRATE THE PUBLICATION OF "Social Movements and Sexual Citizenship in Southern Europe" By Ana Cristina Santos Palgrave Macmillan, 2013 Series: Citizenship, Gender and Diversity (series editors: Beatrice Halsaa, Sasha Roseneil and Sevil Sumer) 7pm Thursday 17 January 2013 at Gay's The Word Bookshop 66 Marchmont Street London WC1N 1AB With short talks by Sasha Roseneil (Director of the Birkbeck Institute for Social Research, Birkbeck), Yvette Taylor (Head of the Weeks Centre, London South Bank University) & Ana Cristina Santos (Senior Researcher, Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra & Honorary Research Fellow, Birkbeck) There will be a short introduction to the book series and the book by Sasha Roseneil, followed by a talk by the author, Ana Cristina Santos. Yvette Taylor will offer a response to the book. Celebratory drinks will be served. This book explores the relationship between social movements, sexual citizenship and change in the context of Southern Europe. Providing a comparative analysis about LGBT issues in Italy, Spain and Portugal, it discusses how activism can generate political, legal and cultural change in post-dictatorial, Catholic and EU-focused countries. The significance of Portugal regarding sexual citizenship stems from the impressive pace at which LGBT rights were granted after the emergence of a LGBT movement. In some respects, Portugal led the way for LGBT rights in Europe. Offering a close engagement with sociological analysis of Spanish and Italian contemporary LGBT politics, this case study provides an opportunity to rethink collective action and sexual citizenship, contributing to timely theoretical and political debates. Based on extensive fieldwork and original qualitative analysis, the book suggests the notion of 'syncretic activism' as a third way of approaching the debate between assimilationism and radicalism. The notion of syncretic activism offers a synthesis of transformative, transgressive and deconstructionist approaches to identity within diversity politics. These findings have direct implications in the understanding and political potential of collective action, highlighting the complex interplay between aims, strategies and outcomes of LGBT activism in Southern Europe. For more information about the book see: http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=488637 RSVP: to Julia Eisner, BISR administrator: j.eisner@bbk.ac.uk<mailto:j.eisner@bbk.ac.uk> by Tuesday 15 January 2013.
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