ID | 198617 |
Title Proper | Queer on the home front |
Other Title Information | Russian LGBTIQ activism and queer security in the wake of Russia’s war in Ukraine |
Language | ENG |
Author | Emil Edenborg |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The article investigates Russian LGBTIQ activism in the context of Russia’s war in Ukraine, a conflict framed in highly gendered and sexualized geopolitical terms. The study aims to develop a deeper understanding of queer security and is based on interviews with Russian LGBTIQ activists, their international funders, as well as a text analysis of Russian official documents and news media. It shows how the safety of queer and trans people in Russia is undermined by wartime state discourses producing them as hypervisible enemies within, the complex ways in which activists navigate security and visibility, that international allies intervene in these negotiations in ways that may or may not align with activists’ priorities, and how the circumstances of war themselves reshape LGBTIQ activism. The study argues for a notion of queer security as geopolitically shaped but embodied and experienced in the everyday, and realized through horizontal grassroot networking. The findings broaden our understanding of queer security by going beyond the scope of institutionalized rights regimes, decentring the state and international organizations as providers of security for queer and trans people, and invite researchers to consider queer activists as actors of international security. |
`In' analytical Note | Security Dialogue Vol. 56, No.2; Apr 2025: p.170 - 187 |
Journal Source | Security Dialogue 2025-04 56, 2 |
Key Words | War ; Security ; Russia ; Visibility ; Queer ; LGBTIQ activism |