CELIA KITZINGER AND SUE WILKINSON
https://search.allgraph.ro/search.html?q=CELIA%20KITZINGER%20AND%20SUE%20WILKINSONMultiSearch Tag Explorer
aéPiot
Go
Celia Kitzinger and Sue Wilkinson
Celia Kitzinger and Sue Wilkinson are a British lesbian couple who unsuccessfully sued to have their relationship recognised as a marriage in England. Both are university professors--Kitzinger in psychology and Wilkinson in gender studies--and they have published four books together. After marrying in Vancouver, Canada, in 2003, the couple discovered on moving back to the UK that their relationship initially had no legal status. In 2004, the Civil Partnership Act allowed their marriage to become a civil partnership, but the couple sued for full legal recognition. In 2006, their bid was rejected by the High Court Family Division. The couple's marriage was eventually recognized on 13 March 2014, when the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013 came into force.
In connection with: Celia Kitzinger and Sue Wilkinson
Title combos: Sue and Celia and Sue Sue Wilkinson Celia Kitzinger
Description combos: their had their in who published Kitzinger four British
Littleton v. Prange, 9 S.W.3d 223 (1999), is a 1999 lawsuit that voided a marriage where one of the individuals was a transgender woman, Christie Lee Littleton. The Fourth Court of Appeals of Texas ruled that, for purposes of Texas law, Littleton is male, and that her marriage to a man was therefore invalid. Texas law did not recognize same-sex marriage at the time of the ruling.
In connection with: Littleton v. Prange
Title combos: Prange Littleton
Description combos: Appeals of male was man 1999 not 3d her

Nick Henderson is a British LGBT rights activist. He was prominent in the campaign that resulted in the Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Act 2014, which recognised same-sex marriage in Scotland.
In connection with: Nick Henderson
Title combos: Henderson Nick
Description combos: Nick British LGBT British the rights British marriage is
Queer heterosexuality is the heterosexual practice or identity that is also controversially called queer. "Queer heterosexuality" is argued to consist of heterosexual, cisgender, and allosexual persons who show nontraditional gender expressions, or who adopt gender roles that differ from the hegemonic masculinity and femininity of their particular culture. The concept was first discussed in the mid-1990s, critically within radical feminism, and as a positive identification by Clyde Smith in a paper delivered at a conference in Amsterdam in 1997; in 2003, The Village Voice published an article called, "The Queer Heterosexual", which has since been cited by others using the term. The idea that any heterosexual can be called "queer" is highly contested. Some in the LGBTQ+ community consider the use of the term "queer" by heterosexual people to be an offensive misappropriation, involving people not experiencing oppression for their sexual orientation or gender identity appropriating aspects of queer identities perceived as "fashionable" or attractive, and disregarding the concurrent oppression experienced by those they appropriate from. Transgender people (who are generally considered queer) may also be heterosexual, although such individuals may also be referred to as transhet.
In connection with: Queer heterosexuality
Title combos: Queer heterosexuality
Description combos: who controversially the any is identities be appropriate the
Onlywomen Press (briefly known as The Women's Press) was a feminist press based in London. It was the only feminist press to be founded by out lesbians, Lilian Mohin, Sheila Shulman, and Deborah Hart. It commenced publishing in 1974 and was one of five notably active feminist publishers in the 1990s. Onlywomen was unique from other British feminist presses because it both printed and published material. This allowed them to control all parts of the "chain of cultural production" and to "subsidize publishing activity" by printing books. Between 1986 and 1988 it published the journal Gossip: A Journal of Lesbian Feminist Ethics. Writers published in the press often read their work at Gay's the Word bookshop. A number of noted lesbian writers published by Onlywomen Press include Anna Livia, Margaret Sloan-Hunter, Jay Taverner, Celia Kitzinger and Sue Wilkinson, Sylvia Martin and Sheila Jeffreys. Its last book, a children's book, was published in 2010.
In connection with: Onlywomen Press
Title combos: Onlywomen Press
Description combos: the Livia Shulman of published The Gossip based briefly
Virginia Braun is a New Zealand psychology academic specialising in thematic analysis and gender studies. She is particularly known for her scholarship on the social construction of the vagina and designer vagina cosmetic surgery, body hair and heterosexuality. She is perhaps best known for her collaboration with British psychologist Victoria Clarke around thematic analysis and qualitative research methods. Together they have published numerous papers, chapters, commentaries and editorials on thematic analysis and qualitative research, and an award-winning and best selling qualitative textbook entitled Successful qualitative research. They have a thematic analysis website at The University of Auckland. More recently - with the Story Completion Research Group - they have published around the story completion method.
In connection with: Virginia Braun
Title combos: Virginia Braun
Description combos: studies Virginia They cosmetic qualitative research textbook they qualitative
Victoria Clarke (psychologist)
Victoria Clarke is a UK-based chartered psychologist and an Associate Professor in Qualitative and Critical Psychology at the University of the West England, Bristol. Her work focuses on qualitative psychology and critical psychology, and her background and training is in the fields of women studies, feminist psychology, LGBTQ psychology, and qualitative methods. She is particularly known for her ongoing collaboration with Professor Virginia Braun around qualitative methods. Braun and Clarke developed a widely cited approach to thematic analysis in 2006 and have published extensively around thematic analysis since then. They have also collaborated on an award-winning qualitative research textbook and more recently have published around the qualitative story completion method with the Story Completion Research Group.
In connection with: Victoria Clarke (psychologist)
Title combos: psychologist Victoria Victoria Clarke psychologist
Description combos: University UK the Virginia Professor chartered is thematic research
Quick Access
Tag Explorer
Discover Fresh Ideas in the Universe of aéPiot
MultiSearch | Search | Tag Explorer
SHEET MUSIC | DIGITAL DOWNLOADS
© aéPiot - MultiSearch Tag Explorer. All rights reserved.
Hosted by HOSTGATE