Listing 1 - 6 of 6 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Analiza koja je pred vama još jedna je u nizu publikacija u okviru projekta Coming out! Zagovaranje i zaštita prava LGBT osoba, koji finansira Evropska unija, a realizuju ga Fondacija Heinrich Böll, Ured za Bosnu i Hercegovinu, zajedno sa partnerskim organizacijama Sarajevskim otvorenim centrom i Fondacijom CURE. Ova analiza Izvještavanje medija u 2013. godini o LGBT temama u Bosni i Hercegovini doprinosi kontinuiranom praćenju medija koje Sarajevski otvoreni centar provodi već treću godinu zaredom. Monitoring medijskog izvještavanja tokom 2013. godine razlikuje se od prethodna tri jer se proširuje medijski prostor za analizu, tako da se u ovoj publikaciji, pored štampanih medija, pokazuje na koji način se i ostali mediji – televizija, radio i online mediji – bave LGBT pitanjima. U uvodnom dijelu se skreće pažnja na neke rezultate istraživanja koji su pokazali kako LGBT osobe vide rad medija kada je u pitanju pisanje o njima i njihovim potrebama i problemima, kao i na zakonski okvir koji uređuje medijski prostor u BiH, te na politike društvenih prilika u kojima se izvještava o ovoj marginalizovanoj i ranjivoj grupi. U metodološkim napomenama opisan je način rada na ovom istraživanju i predstavljen materijal koji su autorice podvrgle dekonstruisanju. Osnovni cilj ovog istraživanja bio je predstaviti medijsku sliku u 2013. godini kada su LGBT teme u pitanju, te kroz paralelnu analizu profesionalno najreprezentativnijih i najmanje profesionalnih i etičkih medijskih objava pokazati koje su to dobre, odnosno loše novinarske prakse. Cilj je, također, bio predložiti i moguće smjernice za prevazilaženje negativnih profesionalnih praksi u medijskom izvještavanju u BiH. Kroz osvrt na medijsku kulturu dati su odgovori na pitanje zašto je važno analizirati medijske sadržaje vezane za marginalizovane grupe. Centralni dio analize predstavlja komparativni prikaz najpozitivnijih i najnegativnijih primjera medijskog izvještavanja, uz argumentovano iznošenje pozitivne odnosno negativne kritike materijala. Na kraju se nalaze opšti zaključci kojima se daje cjelokupna slika situacije u poređenju sa situacijom iz prethodnih godina, kao i specifične preporuke za svaki od analiziranih medija koji bi mogli da pomognu novinarkama i novinarima da unaprijede svoj rad. Sveukupno, u praćenoj dnevnoj i periodičnoj štampi, na internetu, radiju i televiziji, od januara do decembra 2013. godine pojavilo se 1415 medijskih objava. U štampanim medijima ukupno je objavljeno 799 tekstova, na televiziji je bilo 104 priloga, na portalima je objavljeno 508 tekstova, dok su na radiju bila samo 4 priloga vezana za LGBT pitanja. Na ovom mjestu napominjemo da su se LGBT teme pojavljivale i na nekim drugim online portalima, te televizijama i televizijskim emisijama koje nisu bile unaprijed označene za medijski monitoring. Uopšteni zaključak bio bi da se, i pored mnogobrojnih neetičnih i neprofesionalnih primjera izvještavanja, otvorio prostor za optimizam, jer se broj medijskih objava o LGBT relevantnim temama značajno povećao u odnosu na prethodnu godinu, a u načinu pisanja novinara_ki čita se dosljednost u bavljenju LGBT temama, te istraživački pristup koji rezultira kvalitetnijim člancima. Iako su se ove godine prvi put pratila izvještavanja televizija, radiostanica i webportala, ohrabruje veliki broj njihovih medijskih objava, posebno na internetu. Treba pohvaliti domaće TV kuće koje su, sve zajedno, više od dva sata svog prostora (preko 120 minuta) posvetile LGBT temama, vrijeme koje nije zanemarivo kada se uporedi sa minutažom koju dobijaju druge manjinske grupe. S obzirom na to da se štampani mediji prate već treću godinu zaredom, imamo preciznu sliku o tome da se broj tekstova povećava: u odnosu na prošlu godinu, broj štampanih priloga porastao je za 277, te je u skladu s tim u porastu i pisanje o temama iz BiH i pozitivni tekstovi (u prošloj godini bilo ih je samo 28, dok ih je ove godine čak 173).
Gay rights. --- Human rights. --- LGBTQ people. --- Sexual minorities.
Choose an application
gender studies --- lgbt studies --- queer studies --- Sexual minorities --- Gender minorities --- GLBT people --- GLBTQ people --- Lesbigay people --- LBG people --- LGBT people --- LGBTQ people --- Non-heterosexual people --- Non-heterosexuals --- Sexual dissidents --- Minorities --- Sexual minorities.
Choose an application
This edited volume fills an important gap in health communication, exploring the significant disparities in access to health care and health coverage that LGBT individuals and their families face. With cutting-edge empirical research, the essays examine the social and structural factors that lead to the stigma and discrimination that LGBT populations experience.
Gays --- Bisexuals --- Transgender people --- Health services accessibility --- Discrimination in medical care --- TG people --- TGs (Transgender people) --- Trans-identified people --- Trans people --- Transgender-identified people --- Transgendered people --- Transgenders --- Transpeople --- Persons --- Bi people --- Bis (Bisexuals) --- Bisexual people --- Gay people --- Gay persons --- Homosexuals --- Medical care --- Health care for LGBTQ people
Choose an application
Gay neighborhoods, like the legendary Castro District in San Francisco and New York's Greenwich Village, have long provided sexual minorities with safe havens in an often unsafe world. But as our society increasingly accepts gays and lesbians into the mainstream, are "gayborhoods" destined to disappear ? Amin Ghaziani provides an incisive look at the origins of these unique cultural enclaves, the reasons why they are changing today, and their prospects for the future.Drawing on a wealth of evidence--including census data, opinion polls, hundreds of newspaper reports from across the United States, and more than one hundred original interviews with residents in Chicago, one of the most paradigmatic cities in America--There Goes the Gayborhood ? argues that political gains and societal acceptance are allowing gays and lesbians to imagine expansive possibilities for a life beyond the gayborhood. The dawn of a new post-gay era is altering the character and composition of existing enclaves across the country, but the spirit of integration can coexist alongside the celebration of differences in subtle and sometimes surprising ways. More diverse options for how to structure gay and lesbian lives mean not the death of gayborhoods but rather their unexpected growth.Exploring the intimate relationship between sexuality and the city, this cutting-edge book reveals how gayborhoods, like the cities that surround them, are organic and continually evolving places. Gayborhoods have nurtured sexual minorities throughout the twentieth century and, despite the unstoppable forces of flux, will remain resonant and revelatory features of urban life
Gay community --- Gay communities --- Communities --- History. --- Andersonville. --- Boystown. --- Chicago. --- Internet. --- assimilation. --- coming out. --- demographic trends. --- gay men. --- gay neighborhoods. --- gayborhoods. --- gays. --- integration. --- journalists. --- lesbians. --- neighborhoods. --- people of color. --- post-gay era. --- queer culture. --- queer youth. --- relocation. --- residents. --- revival. --- same-sex families. --- sexual minorities. --- sexuality. --- straight residents. --- urban change. --- urban life. --- urban planning. --- Coming out --- LGBTQ+ people
Choose an application
Island Bodies analyzes cultural production from Caribbean and Caribbean diaspora writers that flouts sexual norms. The chapters focus on how homosexuality, interracial relationships, transgendered people, and women's sexual agency are portrayed in film, music, and literature.
Sociology of minorities --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Psychological study of literature --- Caribbean Area --- Homosexuality and literature --- Sexual minorities --- Homosexuality --- Interracial marriage --- Transgender people --- Homosexuality and music --- Homosexuality and motion pictures --- Social conditions. --- Caribbean area --- TG people --- TGs (Transgender people) --- Trans-identified people --- Trans people --- Transgender-identified people --- Transgendered people --- Transgenders --- Transpeople --- Persons --- Intermarriage --- Same-sex attraction --- Sexual orientation --- Bisexuality --- Gender minorities --- GLBT people --- GLBTQ people --- Lesbigay people --- LBG people --- LGBT people --- LGBTQ people --- Non-heterosexual people --- Non-heterosexuals --- Sexual dissidents --- Minorities --- Literature and homosexuality --- Literature --- Motion pictures and homosexuality --- Motion pictures --- Music and homosexuality --- Music --- LGBTQ+ films --- LGBTQ+ literature
Choose an application
Contemporary scholars have begun to explore non-normative sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression in a growing victimization literature, but very little research is focused on LGBTQ communities’ patterns of offending (beyond sex work) and their experiences with police, the courts, and correctional institutions. This Handbook, the first of its kind in Criminology and Criminal Justice, will breaks new ground by presenting a thorough treatment of all of these under-explored issues in one interdisciplinary volume that features current empirical work. This innovative handbook includes: -Review of background and historical coverage of issues related to LGBT individuals and criminology -Research on LGBT individuals’ experience as victims as well as perpetrators of crimes, including well-established topics like anti-gay bias crimes, as well as less-explored topics like same-sex domestic violence and youth gang involvement -Exploration of interactions between LGBT communities and the justice system, including police, courts, and corrections agents, particularly in juvenile treatment facilities, jails and prisons. -Important contributions at the intersection of public health and criminology, not only from an epidemiological perspective, but also between certain criminally-defined behaviors and their public health consequences This timely and important work will be an essential resource for researchers in criminology interested in exploring issues facing LGBT individuals, as well as from related disciplines such as sociology, public health, and public policy. It offers a comprehensive source of the current research as well as a jumping-off point for future studies.
Sexual minorities. --- Criminology. --- Developmental psychology. --- Development (Psychology) --- Crime --- Gender minorities --- GLBT people --- GLBTQ people --- LBG people --- LGBT people --- Lesbigay people --- LGBTQ people --- Non-heterosexual people --- Non-heterosexuals --- Sexual dissidents --- Study and teaching --- Sociology. --- Sex (Psychology). --- Gender expression. --- Gender identity. --- Criminology and Criminal Justice. --- Criminology and Criminal Justice, general. --- Gender Studies. --- Sex identity (Gender identity) --- Sexual identity (Gender identity) --- Identity (Psychology) --- Sex (Psychology) --- Queer theory --- Expression, Gender --- Sex role --- Psychology, Sexual --- Sex --- Sexual behavior, Psychology of --- Sexual psychology --- Sensuality --- Social theory --- Social sciences --- Psychological aspects --- Minorities --- Developmental psychobiology --- Psychology --- Life cycle, Human --- Criminals
Listing 1 - 6 of 6 |
Sort by
|