Papers
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers , 2019
This newspaper develops the concept of disorientation every bit a constitutive but overlooked dimension of m... more This paper develops the concept of disorientation as a constitutive but overlooked dimension of mobile life, and it explores the significance of disorientation for geographical thought. Conceptually, the paper argues that disorientation is a productive geographical concept for acknowledging how, at times, bodies can lose their orienting relations to other bodies, to actions, and to situations. These losses are explored through the themes of incomprehension, defoliation, and disintegration , respectively. Substantively, through research with mobile worker households in Australia, the paper expands our understanding of geographies of mobility past interrogating non-traditional but increasingly common living scenarios created by intensified mobility. Methodologically, the newspaper develops a narrative arroyo to presenting the richly complex experiences of "left behind" mobile worker partners through impressionistic interview portraits. Disciplinarily, contributing to ongoing debates in geography on relationality and encounter, the newspaper provides a counterbalance to the dominant focus on relation construction, and information technology opens up infinite for thinking differently almost what, exactly, is being encountered in disorienting experiences.
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Australian Geographer , 2018
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Chapter 12 Conclusion: Tackling the 'Missing Scale' in Environmental Po... more than Affiliate 12 Determination: Tackling the 'Missing Calibration' in Environmental Policy Ruth Lane and Andrew Gorman-Murray The foregoing chapters accept demonstrated that household sustainability is a complex issue that requires thoughtful discussion from multiple perspectives. Indeed throughout this collection we have encouraged a dialogical arroyo. On the one hand our aim has been to bring researchers from human geography and cultural studies into a productive dialogue around the material geographies of household sustainability. In that location has been enthusiastic cross- ...
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Contempo accounts of sexual commerce have fatigued attention to the proliferation of online and sexual... more than Recent accounts of sexual commerce have drawn attention to the proliferation of online and sexual consumption. However the mediated exchange of sexual images and content folds into the spaces of the city in a variety of circuitous ways. Drawing on a variety of social science perspectives, this paper provides an introductory overview of a collection of papers exploring the irresolute contours of sexual consumption in the metropolis and the distribution of sexual commerce across – and between - private, domestic and public, commercial spaces. Exploring the ways in which diverse LGBT and heterosexual identities are differently marketised, commodified and consumed, this introduction argues that over the last decade, contradictory moments of sexual emancipation and repression accept inverse where (and how) sexual consumption is visible in the urban center, shaping rights to the city in circuitous means which need to exist more thoroughly acknowledged 'mainstream' urban studies.
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Over the final decade, meaning LGBT rights have been acceded in political and legal spheres in... more Over the concluding decade, meaning LGBT rights accept been acceded in political and legal spheres in many countries, including greater social acceptance and equality in marriage, family unit and adoption laws. However at the aforementioned time, opposition to LGBT inclusion is non only trenchant, just growing, in many of the countries where rights have been 'won'. Groups opposed to LGBT inclusion are increasingly well organised, aligned and evidence transnational interconnections. Research into opposition groups in Canada and the UK (supported by a SSHRC Insight Grant) has already begun to investigate how these resistances are manifested, their global embeddedness, and the arguments against LGBT inclusion that they assemble, indicating their implications for future social and political cohesion and/or tension. Understanding the depth and composure of opposition to LGBT inclusion is vital if political and legislative successes are to go along. Edifice on the work apropos Canada and the United kingdom, in the electric current paper we present preliminary explorations into the organisational landscape of resistance in Australia, including the kinds of organisations involved and their remit, tactics, arguments, transnational connections and successes. Australia is a critical contemporary site for this exploration: a country where, despite many early on successes, resistance to total LGBT inclusion remains strong – indeed, the simply country in the Anglosphere where aforementioned-sex activity marriage has non been legalised. This political tension will arguably reach a decisive moment in 2016, when a national referendum on same-sex marriage is nigh sure to take identify. Introduction This newspaper is role of a SSHRC Insight Grant Project initially awarded to Catherine Nash, Kath Browne and Miriam Smith, and subsequently expanded to comprise research in Australia. This paper will offer a preliminary sketch of the organisational landscape of contemporary resistance to LGBT recognition and rights claims in Commonwealth of australia. This work has merely begun in the last few weeks, then I stress the provisional and introductory nature of the nowadays discussion. Yes some interesting insights into resistance to LGBT recognition Down Under are already becoming apparent. This paper will sketch out the current landscape of opposition, including what kinds of organisations are involved in challenging LGBT rights claims, how many, which ones are pivotal, their domestic and international connections, and some of their tactics, current campaigns and arguments. The first half of the paper provides background on the SSHRC project and current research, and discusses why Australia has been included, forth with some existing literature about opposition in Australia. The second half of the newspaper turns to the Australian data and preliminary results. Resisting recognition The SSHRC projection, as initially conceived, examines contemporary oppositions and resistances to LGBT inclusion in Canada and Britain. These are countries where LGBT rights – legal and political equality – accept been seemingly 'won', including human being rights protections and access to union, adoption and family unit welfare. Nonetheless simultaneously, opposition to LGBT inclusion is trenchant in Canada and Britain. Moreover, it is growing and galvanising, and thus understanding the depth and composure of opposition to LGBT inclusion is vital if political and legislative successes are to continue. While much critical research inside geographies of sexualities has rightly critiqued the homonormativities enabled through LGBT-inclusive legislation, less attention has been trained on the construction and assertion of heteronormativities in resistance to LGBT rights claims.
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This article examines lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans (LGBT) experiences of deportation, habitation ... more than This article examines lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans (LGBT) experiences of displacement, habitation loss, and rebuilding in the face of natural disasters. LGBT vulnerability and resilience are little studied in disaster research; this article begins to fill this gap, focusing on LGBT domicide—how LGBT homes are "un made" in disasters. To practise this, we critically read a range of non-government, scholarly, and media commentaries on LGBT experiences of natural disasters in various settings over 2004–12, including South Asia, the U.s., Republic of haiti, and Nihon. Additionally, we use preliminary information from airplane pilot piece of work on LGBT experiences of 2011 disasters in Brisbane, Australia, and Christchurch, New Zealand. we find that disaster impacts are the first stage of ongoing problems for sexual and gender minorities. Disaster impacts destroy LGBT residences and neighborhoods, only response and recovery strategies favor assistance for heterosexual nuclear families and elide the concerns and needs of LGBT survivors. Disaster impact, response, and recovery "un makes" LGBT home and belonging, or inhibits homemaking, at multiple scales, from the residence to the neighborhood. we focus on 3 scales or sites: first, destruction of individual residences, and issues with displacement and rebuilding; second, concerns about privacy and discrimination for individuals and families in temporary shelters; and third, loss and rebuilding of LGBT neighborhoods and community infrastructure (e.g. leisure venues and organizational facilities).
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Gender, Place & Civilization: A Journal of Feminist Geography , 2013
This article seeks a queering of research and policy in relation to natural disasters, their huma... more This article seeks a queering of research and policy in relation to natural disasters, their human impacts, management and response. The homo impacts of natural disasters vary across different social groups. We argue that one group largely absent-minded from scholarly and policy agendas is sexual and gender minorities, or lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender/transsexual and intersex (LGBTI) populations. To demonstrate that these minorities have item experiences that need to exist addressed, nosotros critically review five case studies that contain the limited scholarly and policy research on LGBTI populations in disasters to engagement. Building on this, we offering some specific ways forwards for queer disaster enquiry that accounts for the vulnerabilities, needs and resilient capacities of LGBTI populations. In doing and then, we recognise and urge researchers, policy-makers and aid agencies to admit that LGBTI populations are not homogeneous and have different needs wrought by intersections of socio-economic resource, gender, race/ethnicity, age and regional or national location.
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Geographical Research , 2013
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Publication View. 36472177. Volume review : 'The globalization of sexuality' (2006). Gorm... more Publication View. 36472177. Book review : 'The globalization of sexuality' (2006). Gorman-Murray, Andrew. Abstract. Book review of 'The globalization of sexuality', by Jon Binnie. London: Sage. 2004. 167 pp. ISBN 0761959351 cloth; 076195936X paper.. ii folio(south). ...
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Publication View. 58921365. Queering domicile, domesticating deviance (2006). Gorman-Murray, Andrew. ... more than Publication View. 58921365. Queering home, domesticating deviance (2006). Gorman-Murray, Andrew. Abstract. 3 page(s). Publication details. Download, http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/12309. Publisher, London : Routledge. Contributors, Macquarie University. Dept. ...
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Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers , 2019
This paper develops the concept of disorientation as a constitutive but overlooked dimension of m... more This paper develops the concept of disorientation as a constitutive but overlooked dimension of mobile life, and information technology explores the significance of disorientation for geographical thought. Conceptually, the paper argues that disorientation is a productive geographical concept for acknowledging how, at times, bodies tin can lose their orienting relations to other bodies, to deportment, and to situations. These losses are explored through the themes of incomprehension, defoliation, and disintegration , respectively. Substantively, through enquiry with mobile worker households in Australia, the newspaper expands our understanding of geographies of mobility by interrogating non-traditional but increasingly common living scenarios created by intensified mobility. Methodologically, the paper develops a narrative approach to presenting the richly complex experiences of "left behind" mobile worker partners through impressionistic interview portraits. Disciplinarily, contributing to ongoing debates in geography on relationality and encounter, the newspaper provides a counterbalance to the dominant focus on relation construction, and information technology opens upwardly space for thinking differently virtually what, exactly, is being encountered in disorienting experiences.
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Australian Geographer , 2018
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Chapter 12 Conclusion: Tackling the 'Missing Scale' in Environmental Po... more than Chapter 12 Conclusion: Tackling the 'Missing Scale' in Environmental Policy Ruth Lane and Andrew Gorman-Murray The foregoing capacity have demonstrated that household sustainability is a complex consequence that requires thoughtful discussion from multiple perspectives. Indeed throughout this collection nosotros have encouraged a dialogical approach. On the one mitt our aim has been to bring researchers from human geography and cultural studies into a productive dialogue around the material geographies of household sustainability. In that location has been enthusiastic cross- ...
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Recent accounts of sexual commerce accept drawn attention to the proliferation of online and sexual... more Recent accounts of sexual commerce take drawn attending to the proliferation of online and sexual consumption. Still the mediated exchange of sexual images and content folds into the spaces of the metropolis in a diverseness of complex ways. Drawing on a variety of social science perspectives, this newspaper provides an introductory overview of a collection of papers exploring the changing contours of sexual consumption in the city and the distribution of sexual commerce across – and between - private, domestic and public, commercial spaces. Exploring the ways in which diverse LGBT and heterosexual identities are differently marketised, commodified and consumed, this introduction argues that over the terminal decade, contradictory moments of sexual emancipation and repression have changed where (and how) sexual consumption is visible in the city, shaping rights to the city in circuitous ways which need to be more thoroughly acknowledged 'mainstream' urban studies.
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Over the last decade, significant LGBT rights have been acceded in political and legal spheres in... more Over the terminal decade, pregnant LGBT rights take been acceded in political and legal spheres in many countries, including greater social acceptance and equality in union, family and adoption laws. Yet at the same fourth dimension, opposition to LGBT inclusion is not only trenchant, but growing, in many of the countries where rights have been 'won'. Groups opposed to LGBT inclusion are increasingly well organised, aligned and evidence transnational interconnections. Enquiry into opposition groups in Canada and the UK (supported by a SSHRC Insight Grant) has already begun to investigate how these resistances are manifested, their global embeddedness, and the arguments confronting LGBT inclusion that they get together, indicating their implications for future social and political cohesion and/or tension. Understanding the depth and composure of opposition to LGBT inclusion is vital if political and legislative successes are to go along. Edifice on the work concerning Canada and the UK, in the current paper nosotros present preliminary explorations into the organisational landscape of resistance in Commonwealth of australia, including the kinds of organisations involved and their remit, tactics, arguments, transnational connections and successes. Commonwealth of australia is a critical contemporary site for this exploration: a country where, despite many early successes, resistance to total LGBT inclusion remains strong – indeed, the only land in the Anglosphere where aforementioned-sex activity matrimony has not been legalised. This political tension will arguably reach a decisive moment in 2016, when a national plebiscite on aforementioned-sex activity marriage is almost certain to take identify. Introduction This newspaper is function of a SSHRC Insight Grant Project initially awarded to Catherine Nash, Kath Browne and Miriam Smith, and subsequently expanded to incorporate research in Australia. This newspaper will offer a preliminary sketch of the organisational landscape of gimmicky resistance to LGBT recognition and rights claims in Australia. This work has only begun in the last few weeks, so I stress the provisional and introductory nature of the present discussion. Yep some interesting insights into resistance to LGBT recognition Down Nether are already becoming apparent. This paper will sketch out the electric current landscape of opposition, including what kinds of organisations are involved in challenging LGBT rights claims, how many, which ones are pivotal, their domestic and international connections, and some of their tactics, current campaigns and arguments. The first half of the paper provides groundwork on the SSHRC projection and current inquiry, and discusses why Australia has been included, forth with some existing literature near opposition in Australia. The second half of the paper turns to the Australian data and preliminary results. Resisting recognition The SSHRC projection, equally initially conceived, examines contemporary oppositions and resistances to LGBT inclusion in Canada and U.k.. These are countries where LGBT rights – legal and political equality – have been seemingly 'won', including human rights protections and access to marriage, adoption and family welfare. All the same simultaneously, opposition to LGBT inclusion is trenchant in Canada and Britain. Moreover, it is growing and galvanising, and thus understanding the depth and sophistication of opposition to LGBT inclusion is vital if political and legislative successes are to continue. While much critical research within geographies of sexualities has rightly critiqued the homonormativities enabled through LGBT-inclusive legislation, less attention has been trained on the construction and assertion of heteronormativities in resistance to LGBT rights claims.
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This article examines lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans (LGBT) experiences of displacement, dwelling house ... more This article examines lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans (LGBT) experiences of displacement, dwelling loss, and rebuilding in the face of natural disasters. LGBT vulnerability and resilience are piffling studied in disaster research; this article begins to fill this gap, focusing on LGBT domicide—how LGBT homes are "un made" in disasters. To do this, we critically read a range of not-government, scholarly, and media commentaries on LGBT experiences of natural disasters in various settings over 2004–12, including South asia, the USA, Haiti, and Nippon. Additionally, nosotros utilize preliminary data from pilot piece of work on LGBT experiences of 2011 disasters in Brisbane, Australia, and Christchurch, New Zealand. nosotros find that disaster impacts are the first stage of ongoing bug for sexual and gender minorities. Disaster impacts destroy LGBT residences and neighborhoods, just response and recovery strategies favor assistance for heterosexual nuclear families and elide the concerns and needs of LGBT survivors. Disaster impact, response, and recovery "un makes" LGBT habitation and belonging, or inhibits homemaking, at multiple scales, from the residence to the neighborhood. we focus on three scales or sites: showtime, destruction of individual residences, and problems with displacement and rebuilding; 2d, concerns about privacy and bigotry for individuals and families in temporary shelters; and tertiary, loss and rebuilding of LGBT neighborhoods and customs infrastructure (eastward.g. leisure venues and organizational facilities).
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Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography , 2013
This commodity seeks a queering of research and policy in relation to natural disasters, their huma... more than This article seeks a queering of research and policy in relation to natural disasters, their human impacts, management and response. The human impacts of natural disasters vary across different social groups. We contend that one group largely absent from scholarly and policy agendas is sexual and gender minorities, or lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender/transsexual and intersex (LGBTI) populations. To demonstrate that these minorities have particular experiences that need to be addressed, we critically review 5 case studies that comprise the limited scholarly and policy enquiry on LGBTI populations in disasters to engagement. Edifice on this, we offering some specific ways forward for queer disaster research that accounts for the vulnerabilities, needs and resilient capacities of LGBTI populations. In doing so, we recognise and urge researchers, policy-makers and aid agencies to acknowledge that LGBTI populations are not homogeneous and have different needs wrought by intersections of socio-economic resources, gender, race/ethnicity, historic period and regional or national location.
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Geographical Research , 2013
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Publication View. 36472177. Volume review : 'The globalization of sexuality' (2006). Gorm... more than Publication View. 36472177. Volume review : 'The globalization of sexuality' (2006). Gorman-Murray, Andrew. Abstract. Book review of 'The globalization of sexuality', by Jon Binnie. London: Sage. 2004. 167 pp. ISBN 0761959351 fabric; 076195936X newspaper.. ii page(s). ...
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Publication View. 58921365. Queering abode, domesticating deviance (2006). Gorman-Murray, Andrew. ... more Publication View. 58921365. Queering home, domesticating deviance (2006). Gorman-Murray, Andrew. Abstract. 3 page(south). Publication details. Download, http://hdl.handle.cyberspace/1959.xiv/12309. Publisher, London : Routledge. Contributors, Macquarie University. Dept. ...
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Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
This paper develops our geographical understanding of the gendered politics of (im)mobility by ex... more than This paper develops our geographical understanding of the gendered politics of (im)mobility by exploring the hidden politics of waiting experienced by some mobile working households. Reflecting on qualitative fieldwork with female partners of mobile workers in Australia who remain at habitation, we explain how 'stuckness' is a specific form of waiting that highlights a power-geometry where their immobility is exacerbated by the mobility of their partner. Its key contribution is to spotlight an overlooked durational attribute to immobility which supplements a previous focus on spatial immobility. Taking the self-governing activity of emotion management equally our betoken of departure, nosotros describe on qualitative interviews to highlight the multiple means that our female participants become focused on brusque-term processes of getting by, leaving them stuck in the present. A more all-encompassing immersion into the lifeworld of i woman through a photo diary and subsequent interview draws attention to the more passive, insidiously listless dimensions of stuckness which can compromise wellbeing for mobile worker partners.
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Cultural Geographies , 2020
This article develops cultural geographical understandings of exhaustion through an exploration o... more This article develops cultural geographical understandings of exhaustion through an exploration of the bodily pressures induced by mobile working practices. Through assay of semi-structured interviews with resource sector workers in Australia who work away from domicile for periods of fourth dimension equally well as 'left backside' partners, we argue that exhaustion is a collective 'construction of feeling', but ane that is differently experienced by mobile workers and partners. Tracing the various rhythms of pinch and decompression that are experienced by workers and partners both at home and abroad, our focus on temporality connects the exhaustions experienced at resource extraction sites with exhaustions experienced in the home. By providing an important temporal focus to debates on intimacy-geopolitics, we explain how rhythms instigated past resources work are complicit in generating structures of feeling that compromise wellbeing within the home. We conclude that the exhausted bodies of mobile worker households are an obscured casualty of our current resource-intensive lives.
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