VIII International Conference: NAMING AND FRAMING

Transcription

VIII International Conference: NAMING AND FRAMING
VIII International Conference:
NAMING AND FRAMING:
The Making of Sexual (In)Equality
Madrid, Spain, 06-09 July 2011
CONFERENCE CONVENERS
• Conference Convener: José Ignacio Pichardo Galán, Social Anthropology Department of
Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain.
Conference Venue: Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE, VIII International Conference
• Diane di Mauro, Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University, USA.
• José Ignacio Pichardo, Department of Social Anthropology, Universidad Complutense de
Madrid, Spain.
• Ana Porroche Escudero, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Sussex, UK.
• Alejando Melero, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain.
• Beatriz Gimeno, Feminist Writer and LGBT Activist, Spain.
• Carlos Cáceres, Universidad Cayetano Heredia, Instituto de Estudios en Salud, Sexualidad y
Desarrollo Humano, Peru.
• Evelyn Blackwood, Department of Anthropology and Women’s Studies, Purdue University,
USA.
• Gil Herdt, National Sexuality Resource Center (NSRC), San Francisco State University, USA.
• Huso Yi, School of Public Health and Primary Care, Faculty of Medicine, the Chinese University
of Hong Kong, China.
• José Luis Linaza Iglesias, Department of Evolutionary Psychology and Education,
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain.
• Laurent Gaissad, Institut de Sociologie at Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium.
• Philip Martin, Researcher, Australia.
• Violeta Barrientos, Faculty of Social Science, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Peru.
• Consuelo Álvarez Plaza, Department of Social Anthropology, Universidad Complutense de
Madrid, Spain.
• Inmaculada Hurtado, Valencia International University, Spain.
Ruth Iguiñiz, Peru – Executive Coordinator
Ximena Gutiérrez, Peru – Administrator
Fátima Valdivia, Peru – Conference Organizing Committee Assistant
Matías de Stefano, Spain – Conference Organizing Committee Assistant
Fernando Olivos, Peru – Cultural Programme and Special Activities Coordinator
With support from:
• The Staff of the Institute of Studies in Health, Sexuality and Human Development (Peru).
• The Staff of the Department of Social Anthropology, Universidad Complutense de
Madrid (Spain).
• The Spanish Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transexual Federation - FELGTB (Spain).
• The Foundation for Socio-Educational Intervention - FISED (Spain).
• Graphic Design: Juan de Dios Zúñiga (Peru) and Camaleón Comunicación (Peru).
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CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT
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• Support Staff: Raquel Barrero, Marcos Dosantos, Andrea García-Santesmases, José Antonio
Martín, María Laura Martín, Laura Martínez, Claudia Mora, Laura Muelas, Lorena Muñiz, Laura
Quintero, Félix Redondo, Jon Rodríguez, María Cristina Romero, Atienza Saldaña, Cristina
Sánchez, Lara Serrano, Victoria Tomás.
Acknowledgments
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Juan Duarte y Bárbara Mateo (ODH)
Ignacio Sola (SEI)
Antonio Poveda, Jennifer Rebollo and Nayra Marrero (FELGTB)
Paul Jansen (HIVOS)
Rosa Deza and Andrzej Gabinski (MCB)
Jesús Bragado, Rocío Serrano Ruíz-Calderón and María José Fernández (Facultad de Medicina
UCM)
Juan Carlos Marín (Jardín Botánico UCM)
María Cátedra, Ana Rivas, Pilar Montero, Fernando Villaamil, Maribel Blázquez and
Mónica Cornejo (Dpto. Antropología Social UCM)
Fernando Lores (Dpto. Antropología Social UCM)
INTERNATIONAL ABSTRACT REVIEW COMMITTEE
Specialists from around the world in one or several fields of expertise volunteered to serve as peer
reviewers, helping to ensure that the abstracts presented were selected on the basis of rigorous
review and high scientific quality. We extend our special thanks to these individuals for the time
they dedicated to ensuring the success of the conference.
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Barry Adam
Consuelo Álvarez
Maks Banens
Enriqueta Barranco
Violeta Barrientos
Berenice Bento
Evelyn Blackwood
Martin Blais
Maribel Blázquez
Lisa Bohmer
Christophe Broqua
Ha Thu Bui
Carlos Cáceres
Kerman Calvo
Gloria Careaga
Hector Carrillo
María Cátedra
Line Chamberland
Elaine Chase
Ana Toledo Chávarri
Andrea Cornwall
Lorna Couldrick
Linh Cu Le
Alexis Dewaele
Diane di Mauro
Marie Digoix
Alison Dundon
Sue Dyson
Deborah Elliston
Jimmy Esparza
Jessica Fields
Kirk Fiereck
Carlos Figari
Gillian Fletcher
Aristea Fotopoulou
Tim Frasca
Laurent Gaissad
David Galaviz
Flor Gamboa
Beatriz Gimeno
Cristiane Gonc¸alves da Silva
Maria Luiza Heilborn
Gilbert Herdt
Irwan Hidayana
Tu Anh Hoang
Inmaculada Hurtado
Chimaroke Izugbara
Lara Karaian
Ummni Khan
Akshay Khanna
Kelika Konda
Ratele Kopano
Roman Kuhar
Teresa Langue de Paz
Cédric Le Bodic
Loraine Ledon
Giang Minh Lee
Andreá Fachel Leal
José Luis Linaza
Paula Machado
Martin Manalansan
Lenore Manderson
Daniel Marshall
Philip Martin
Michelle Marzullo
Karalyn McDonald
Rita Melendez
Alejandro Melero
Rommel Mendes-Leite
Rafael Manuel Mérida Jiménez
Anne Lise Middelthon
Laura Murray
Huong Thanh Nguyen
Nam Thu Nguyen
Nam Truong Nguyen
Fernando Olivos
Kathleen O’Riordan
Raquel Osborne
David Paternotte
William Peres
Charlotte Pézeril
José Ignacio Pichardo
Raquel Lucas Platero
Ana Porroche
Luis Puche
Kane Race
Ahmed Ragab
María Raguz
Vasu Reddy
Gwénola Ricordeau
Marta Roca i Escoda
Gracia Violeta Ross
Ximena Salazar
Mercedes Sánchez
Theo Sandfort
Mirjam Schieveld
Fernando Seffner
Tatiana Sentamans
Megan Sinnott
Horacio Sívori
Marcin Smietana
Anthony Smith
Geoffrey Brian Smith
Ha Vu Song
Rocío Suárez
Judit Takács
Sylvia Tamale
Fernando Teixeira
Thang Trinh
Chi Chi Undie
Anna Paula Uziel
Teresa Valdés
Ernesto Vásquez del Águila
Fernando Villaamil
Bao Ngoc Vu
Saskia Wieringa
Huso Yi
SPONSORS
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We are proud to acknowledge the generous support of:
• The Ford Foundation
• HIVOS
• Madrid Convention Bureau
• Human Rights Office of the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation
• The American Institute of Bisexuality
• Secretary of State for Equality of Spain.
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WELCOMING REMARKS
Dear Delegates,
On behalf of the International Association for the Study of Sexuality, Culture and Society (IASSCS),
the Social Anthropology Department of Universidad Complutense de Madrid, the Organizing
Committee of the VIII International Conference “Naming and Framing: The Making of Sexual (In)
Equality” and our funders and sponsors, I am very pleased to welcome you all to Madrid, Spain, to
participate in this conference.
I would like to thank the IASSCS Board for selecting our city and our university to be the site for this
biennial conference. We are honored to be your hosts for this wonderful event and we welcome
you to Spain. We hope that while you are here, you have an opportunity to experience our rich
culture and wonderful art, music and of course, our cuisine! As our opening panel will present, in
the past forty years with the arrival of democracy to Spain, sexuality has become a primary arena
for obtaining rights, freedom and personal fulfillment. Yet, in the recent history of our country,
many Spaniards have experienced the extent to which sexuality is also is a means for repression
and social control of minds and bodies.
In the last decades, Spain has assumed a leading role both domestic and internationally in
recognizing sexual rights for women, sexual minorities and for the population in general. We owe
this in major part to the implementation of various laws and public policies that place gender and
sexual equality at center stage. Still, our country is far from being a paradise for equality, as the
domain of sexuality continues to be the battleground around issues of equality and inequality and
as well, progress and discrimination, not only in Spain but throughout the world.
The academia and the scientific community are well positioned and retain strategic powers that
can effectively contribute to overcoming this situation. Over the next few days, this community
will come together to report on research focused on the way sexual inequalities are constructed
and questioned, and to reflect on the ways to more effectively promote equality. We will share and
discuss our findings, our approaches, and our lessons learned in the promotion of sexual equality
in academia and advocacy venues.
IASSCS Conferences have traditionally been an important and strategic place for bringing together
academics, advocates and activists, given that our Association is primarily concerned with the need
to create sufficient spaces for mutual collaborative efforts and enrichment. In this VIII Conference
we have put a strong emphasis on integrating the work of policy makers, not only in the discussions
that will take place, but more importantly in identifying the solutions and the means to confront and
overcome inequality. In that light, we have accepted abstracts and presentations both in English
and in Spanish, with the objective of more effectively promoting the exchange of viewpoints and
experiences among local and global participants.
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With more than 400 delegates, we are proud to report that this is the largest IASSCS Conference ever.
Despite the huge economic crisis Spain is and has been experiencing (and will for the foreseeable
future), we have managed to organize and enact this conference. We would first like to thank our
funders for their generous support and also, many thanks goes to the IASSCS Secretariat for all its
support and effort. On behalf of the International and Local Organizing Committee, together with a
great executive team, we hope that all of our effort during the last 18 months will provide you with
a wonderful experience and a very productive conference.
We sincerely hope that you enjoy this conference and we are certain that we will all learn many
new lessons from the presentations and exchanges that will take place here, all conducted with the
intent to continue our mission to build a better and more egalitarian world.
José Ignacio Pichardo Galán
Convener, VIII IASSCS International Conference.
La Secretaria de Estado de Igualdad
SALUDA
A todos los participantes en la VIII Conferencia de la Asociación Internacional para el Estudio de la
Sexualidad, la Cultura y la Sociedad que se celebrará del 6 al 9 de julio de 2011 en Madrid.
El Gobierno de España desde el año 2004 ha situado entre sus prioridades la lucha en favor de la
igualdad y contra todo tipo de discriminación desplegando una intensa actividad en favor del
reconocimiento de los derechos de las personas LGTB, que nos han situado a la vanguardia de los
países de nuestro entorno en materia de derechos civiles
Por tanto, aprovecho esta ocasión para sumarme a los objetivos de esta Conferencia que, bajo el
lema “Nombrar y definir. La construcción de la (des)igualdad sexual”, permitirá a expertos de todo el
mundo compartir los resultados de sus investigaciones, propuestas políticas y reflexiones en cuestiones de sexualidad desde un punto de vista sociocultural.
Bibiana Aído Almagro
Madrid, 3 de julio de 2011
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Deseándoles el mayor de los éxitos, les transmito mi consideración más distinguida,
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GENERAL PROGRAMME
VIII IASSCS CONFERENCE – MADRID 2011
Wednesday
July 6th
Thursday
July 7th
Friday
July 8th
Saturday
July 9th
08:30 - 09:00
Registration (all day)
09:00 - 11:00
Plenary Panel 1:
“Past and future,
theoretical frameworks
for thinking sexuality”
Plenary Panel 2:
“Facing cultural
diversity in the
recognition of Sexual
Rights as Human Rights”
Plenary Panel 3:
(9:30 - 11:30)
“From Ritual to Inequality:
how modernity changes
sexuality?”
Keynote speaker:
John Gagnon
Keynote speaker:
Sherreen El Feki
Keynote speaker:
Gilbert Herdt
Coffee Break
11:00 - 11:30
Parallel Session 1
11:30 - 13:00
13:00 - 14:00
Registration
(throughout the day)
Poster Display
Poster Display
(Presentations by authors)
(IASSCS Bussiness Meeting)
Parallel Session 2
15:00 - 16:30
Opening Ceremony
(17:00 - 18:00)
Parallel Special
Sessions
Parallel Special
Sessions
Diane Di Mauro,
Chair IASSCS Board,
Columbia University
Special Session 1:
“Public policies for the
recognition of LGBT
Human Rights”
Special Session 5:
“LGBT Activism in Latin
America”
José Ignacio Pichardo
Galán Conference
Convener, UCM.
José Carrillo Menéndez
Chancellor, UCM.
Bibiana Aído Almagro
Secretary of State for
Equality.
Introductory Panel
(18:00 - 19:00)
Presenters:
Virginia Maquieira
Universidad Autónoma
de Madrid.
Eric Fassin
École Normale
Supérieure Paris.
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21:00 - 24:00
Parallel Session 4
Coffee Break
16:30 - 17:00
Special Session 2:
“Sexuality and elderly
people in Spain”
Special Session 3:
“Forty years of gay
liberation: What does it
mean for global sexual
politics?”
Special Session 4:
“Sexual Rights
Activism in Middle East
and Northern Africa”
Parallel Session 5
(11:45 - 13:45)
Brunch
(13:15 - 13:45)
Parallel Session 6
(13:45 - 15:30)
Lunch
14:00 - 15:00
17:00 - 19:00
Parallel Session 3
Break
(11:30 - 11:45)
Special Session 6:
“HIV Prevention New
Deal: Gay Health and
Biomedical
Interventions among
MSM”
Special Session 7:
Advocacy, Activism and
Academic Research.
Lessons learned”
Workshop:
Capacity Building in
Academic Writing for
Publication on SRHR:
The ESE: O Methodology
and Experience.
Tapas’ Night
Awards and Closing
Ceremony
(15:30 - 16:00)
GENERAL PROGRAMME
WEDNESDAY, July 6th
Opening Session (17:00 - 18:00 hrs)
Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Institutional representatives:
- Diane Di Mauro, Chair of the IASSCS Board, Columbia University, USA
- José Ignacio Pichardo Galán, Conference Convener, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
Representative from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid:
- José Carrillo Menéndez, Chancellor, Spain
Representative from the Spanish Government:
- Bibiana Aído Almagro, Secretary of State for Equality, Spain
Introductory Panel (18:00 - 19:00 hrs)
Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Presenters : Virginia Maquieira, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Eric Fassin, École Normale Supérieure, France
Chair : José Ignacio Pichardo Galán, Spain
THURSDAY, July 07th
Plenary Panel 1 (09:00 - 11:00 hrs)
Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Past and future, theoretical frameworks for thinking sexuality
Keynote Address : John Gagnon, State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA
Discussants
: Gary Dowsett, La Trobe University, Australia
Maria Luiza Heilborn, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Chair
: Diane Di Mauro, USA
Parallel Session 1 (11:30 - 13:00 hrs)
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Session Title: Memory and Sexuality /Women under Francoism (SS 02)
PRESENTERS:
• Counter model a bourgeois femininity: Visual constructions of power in Sección
Femenina de Falange
María Rosón Villena, Spain
• Antimodels of Female Sexuality under Francoism
Raquel Osborne, Spain
• Tracing back our history: reflecting on the queer gaze of the embodiment of masculinity
in subjects assigned as female
Raquel Lucas Platero, Spain
• Ramón Serrano-Vicens, a pioneer in the research on female sexuality under Franco’s regime
Jordi Manel Monferrer Tomás, Spain
• Women, Gypsies and Lesbians under Franco´s dictatorship
David Berná Serna, Spain
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Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair:Raquel Osborne, Spain
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Room: Sala Botella
Session Title: Media and Sexuality (S 2.0 01)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair:Ximena Salazar, Peru
PRESENTERS:
• Portrayal of Homosexuality in the Turkish Newspapers
Aysegül Somçelik-Köksal, Turkey
• El papel de los medios de comunicación escritos en la construcción de la representación
colectiva sobre la diversidad sexual
Ximena Salazar, Peru
• En busca del Par Perfecto: Género y otras marcas diferenciales en las relaciones
amorosas en internet
Iara Beleli, Brazil
Room: Sala Laín
Session Title: (Re)producing Sexual Hegemonies: LGBTQI Experiences in
Brazil (BH1)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Fernando Teixeira-Filho, Brazil
PRESENTERS:
• Corporalidades en (re)vueltas: transformaciones y placeres corporales en la
transcontemporaneidad
Márcio Nascimento, Brazil
• Lesbian Invisibility in Brazil
Lívia Gonsalves Toledo, Brazil
• Ethics-aesthetics-politics of Homoerotic Experience, Gender and Transgression in the
America’s Cinematography
Fernando Teixeira-Filho, Brazil
• Sujetos de la contra-sexualidad y procesos de subjetivación queer
William Peres, Brazil
Room: Sala Shüller
Session Title: Bisexuals in the house of sexual diversity (BH 02)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Nora Madison, USA
PRESENTERS:
• Unsettling Certainties: Understanding Factors Influencing Sexual Identity Formation of
Bisexual Men in Mumbai, India
Ankur Srivastava, India
• Bisexual Masculinity in Brazil: Possibilities of Sexual Inequalities
Fernando Seffner, Brazil
• The Articulation of Bisexual Identities in New Mediascapes: Negotiating (in)visibility online
Nora Madison, USA
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Room: Aula 7
Session Title: Sexuality and Sexual and Reproductive Rights (SS 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Juliet Richters, Australia
PRESENTERS:
• Public Policies and Private Behaviours: The Case Of In-School Pregnancy Policies in
Mozambique
Francesca Salvi, Italy
• Obstáculos para la efectiva despenalización del aborto en casos extremos en Colombia
Astrid Orjuela, Colombia
• Del ejercicio de la sexualidad a las muertes maternas
Erika Troncoso, Mexico
• Promoting sexual democracies: advocacy efforts in Latin America to ensure the
fulfillment of sexual rights
Flor Hunt, USA
• What’s contraception got to do with sex? The neglect of reproductive issues in sexuality
research
Juliet Richters, Australia
Room: Aula 8
Session Title: Development Work Representations from a Country
Perspective (DWRSI 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Raquel Vañó Vicedo, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• Governing Bodies: The Gendering Process of the International Development Project
Jay Tyler Malette, Canada
• A critical analysis of Norwegian Development policy on Sexual orientation and Gender
identity
Annika Rodriguez, Norway
• La reconstrucción posbélica desde el género: una deuda pendiente
Raquel Vañó Vicedo, Spain
• Representations as Interventions: Framing HIV and Sexual and Gender-Based Violence
in Conflict
Lauren Mumford, Netherlands
Room: Aula 10
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Ara Wilson, USA
PRESENTERS:
• Navigating the Bajo Mundo: Transgender mobility and the regulation of sex and gender
in the eastern Dominican Republic
Mark Padilla, USA
• The Global Culture of Panic Around “Trafficking in Women”
Elizabeth Bernstein, USA
• Erotic Mobility in “Romance Tourism”
Ara Wilson, USA
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Session Title: Erotic Mobility and Cultures of Response (TI 01)
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Room: Aula 11
Session Title: Explaining Same-Sex Union Laws Through Large
Comparisons in Demography and Political Science (TI 02)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: José Ignacio Pichardo Galán, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• Same-sex unions in Europe: Major diversities between countries
Maks Banens, France
• The globalization of same-sex marriage: Comparing explanations
David Paternotte, Belgium
• The Demography of Same-Sex Unions
Nicolas Belliot, France
• Same-sex marriage law in Portugal: A case study and its peculiarities
Fernando Cascais, Portugal
Room: Aula 12
Session Title: Framing the Body through Policy and Technology (NNB 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Inmaculada Hurtado, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• “Our Caster”: (Dis)embodied (Un)Belonging in the Post-Apartheid Nation-State
Benita de Robillard, South Africa
• “Improper” Bodies and the Biomedicine Role
Inmaculada Hurtado García, Spain
• “I would love to have a go at the karma sutra but that ain’t gonna happen”:
Impaired Bodies and Normative Sexual Expression
Kirsty Liddiard, United Kingdom
• Living without breast(s): Women’s Experience of their Bodies Following a Mastectomy
Kay Gravell, Australia
Room: Aula 13
Session Title: Redefining Pleasure and Sexuality (PDSI 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Philip Martin, Australia
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PRESENTERS:
• Neither Fun nor Moral: Discussing Normative Ambivalence in the Sex Lives of Young
Vietnamese Men
Philip Martin, Australia
• The « Clitoris » that Makes Difference
Michela Villani, Switzerland
• Breasts as Sexual Organs – the Extent and Use of our Physiological Knowledge
Margaret Duckett, United Kingdom
• Stories as Jouissance: Gender and the Unveiling of Desire in Children’s Filipino
Storybooks
Maureen Macaraeg, Philippines
Room: Aula 16
Session Title: Overcoming Social and Cultural Practices (RESASI 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Bhana Deevia, South Africa
PRESENTERS:
• I don’t want the others to know I am gay: perceptions of equality and rights among gay
men in China
Lai Yi Kwok, Hong Kong
• Sexuality as criterion for ethnic selection and exclusion: Chinese female migrants in
Southeast Asia
Melody Chia-Wen Lu, Singapore
• Mobilizing for sexual health: The experiences of South Asian men who have sex with
men in London
David Ansari, United Kingdom
• “We have to talk to them about rape” Township mothers on gender and the prevention
of child sexual abuse
Deevia Bhana, South Africa
Parallel Session 2 (15:00 - 16:30 hrs)
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Session Title: Trans Rights, Law and Citizenship (SS 04)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Dolores Martín, Spain
Room: Sala Botella
Session Title: Queer Youth (BH 04)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Mercedes Sánchez, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• First-time sexual experiences of same-sex attracted adolescents and young adults in the
Netherlands
Daphne van de Bongardt, Netherlands
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PRESENTERS:
• State and “travesti” organizations in Buenos Aires: ethnography of a tense relationship
María Soledad Cutuli, Argentina
• The Struggle for Legal Citizenship among Trans Women in Mexico City
Oralia Gómez-Ramírez, Mexico
• Activismo por la despatologización de las identidades trans
Amets Suess, Spain
• The public debate regarding a Gender Identity Law: Social representations about
transsexual people in the Portuguese press
Nuno Pinto, Portugal
• Subject, conventions and differences: an ethnographic of debates around public health
policies for travestis and transsexuals
Bruno Cesar Barbosa, Brazil
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Historical shifts in queer youth organizations in Australia: from collectives to youth services
Daniel Marshall, Australia
Adolescencias trans en las aulas españolas
Luis Puche Cabezas, Spain
“Your dick has no power in this hour”: confronting the politics of gender and sexuality in
a South African University
Susan Holland-Muter, South Africa
• Oppression and Relationships in young lesbians, gays and bisexuals in Portugal
Henrique Pereira, Portugal
Room: Sala Laín
Session Title: Gender Perspectives in Education (ASPR 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Sergio Missana, Chile
PRESENTERS:
• Genders, sexualities and bodies in teacher education in Brazil
Carla Cristina García, Brazil
• Establishing a Gender Perspective Education Curriculum in Indonesia
Shera Pringgodigdo, Indonesia
• Students’ intimate life styles in Slovenia: The inconsistencies between values and
(sexual) praxis
Roman Kuhar, Slovenia
• Redressing inequalities in SRHR: Legitimizing voices from the South. ESE:O’s Peer
Review Program
Sergio Missana Mancilla, Chile
Room: Sala Shüller
Session Title: Women Same-Sex Sexualities: Fighting Invisibilization and
Heterosexism (BH 03)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Susan Talburt, USA
PRESENTERS:
• The Politics of Lesbian Invisibility in Global Development: Rights, Livelihood, and Activism
Amy Lind, USA
• ‘Living Sexualities’: Understanding non-heterosexual women’s sexuality in urban middle
class Bangladesh
Shuchi Karim, Netherlands
• Landscapes of Activism: Chilean Lesbian-Feminist Activists, the Grid, and Possibilties for
Mutant Coordinates
Susan Talburt, USA
• Fisuras, desplazamientos, prácticas y pensamiento de chicas con prácticas sexuales
y afectivas lésbicas con relación al Pensamiento Heterosexual y Heterosexualidad
Obligatoria en la ciudad de Valparaíso.
Daniela Vega, Chile
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Room: Aula 7
Session Title: Age and Sexuality (NNB 02)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Carlos Henning, Brazil
PRESENTERS:
• Dating again and the (re)negotiation of sexuality
Sarah Milton, United Kingdom
• Diferencias de género y edad en creencias, actitudes y conductas de los adolescentes
peruanos sobre sexualidad
Junco Pando, Peru
• Cuerpo, Juventud y Envejecimiento: un estudio etnográfico de las relaciones
generacionales entre hombres en contextos de sociabilidad homoerótica de São Paulo,
Brasil
Carlos Henning, Brazil
• Care expectations in old age and health behaviour in middle-aged and elderly gay men
Gerardo Zamora-Monge, Spain
Room: Aula 8
Session Title: State-Sponsored Inequalities: The Politics of Sexuality in
Contemporary China (SS 03)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Suiming Pan, China
PRESENTERS:
• Exploring perceptions and prevention of sexual coercion and violence against young
women in contemporary Beijing
Alessandra Aresu, United Kingdom
• Regulating Sexuality and its Political Contexts: Critical review of laws and policies on
anti-prostitution since the establishment of the People’s Republic of China
Suiming Pan, China
• The paradox of pluralization: men, masculinities and power in contemporary China
Derek Hird, United Kingdom
Room: Aula 10
Session Title: Medical Discourses on Gender and Sexuality (SS 05)
PRESENTERS:
• The Potential of Circumscription: Non-normative Gender and Sexual Identities in the
World of Japanese Women’s Professional Football
Elise Edwards, USA
• (W)righting women: Constructions of gender, sexuality & disorder through psychiatric
documentation practices
Andrea Daley, Canada
• Sex under scalpel: intersexuality and biomedical discourse in practice. Field research
(Slovenia, Europe)
Taja Topolovec, Slovenia
• Improving data collection processes to enhance the sexual health of indigenous peoples
Clive Aspin, Australia
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Session Language: English
Session Chair: Andrea Daley, Canada
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Room: Aula 11
Session Title: Creating Lesbian and Gay Families: Marriage and Parenting
(SS 06)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Marcin Smietana, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• Lesbian mothers and gay fathers families in Spain after the legislative change: From
legal to real equality
M.- Mar González Rodríguez, Spain
• Why marriage mattered! The meaning of marriage in Icelandic society
Marie Digoix, France
• The Construction of the LGTB Subject as ‘a Family Outlaw’ within Italian Media Discourse
Marian Franchi, United Kingdom
Room: Aula 12
Session Title: The Sexualized Body and its Transgressions (Arts and SI 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Zowie Davy, United Kingdom
PRESENTERS:
• Sexing it Up: towards new conceptualizations of trans-sexuality in healthcare
Zowie Davy, United Kingdom
• Female Orgasm as Social Emancipation
Cara Judea Alhadeff, USA
• New spaces, new actors, new moralities in the Buenos Aires artistic field
Mariana Cerviño, Argentina
Room: Aula 13
Session Title: The internet is for Porn? Cyberspace and the New Uses of the
Net (S2.0 02)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Marik Xavier-Brier, USA
PRESENTERS:
• The pressure of hegemonic norms: Polish Sexual and Gender Minorities in Cyberspace
Lukasz Szulc, Belgium
• Sexualization of Polish Adolescents Through Media and Internet Pornography: Online
Sex Educator’s Perspective
Anka Grzywacz, Poland
• “Looking For A Good Time?”: An exploration of the language and tactics men utilize in
the Men-seeking-Men section of Craigslist
Marik Xavier-Brier, USA
• Individual Liberty and Objectification: Sex Trade, Sex Dolls, and Fetishism
Deborah Blizzard, USA
14
Room: Aula 16
Session Title: Decriminalizing and Normalizing Policies (SS 13)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Jacqueline Marx, South Africa
PRESENTERS:
• The use of law and policy to control sexuality among adolescents in Grenada
Tonia Frame
• Governance and agency: Actions to crack down on prostitution, their influence over the
terms and content of sex work in China
Yingying Huang, China
• The Impact of decriminalization of same sex law: An empirical study
Dipika Jain, India
• Sex at the Station Bar: Challenging the state sanctioned prohibition of homosexuality in
South Africa during Apartheid
Jacqueline Marx, South Africa
• Queerying the public administration: local strategies and compromises
Beatrice Gusmano, Italy
Parallel Special Sessions (17:00 - 19:00 hrs)
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Special Session 1:
Public Policies for the Recognition of LGBT Human Rights, organized by the Secretary of State
for Equality of the Spanish Ministry of Health, Social Policy and Equality, and the Human Rights
Office of the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Chair:
- Andrea Cornwall, University of Sussex
Presenters:
- Juan Duarte Cuadrado, Director of the Human Rights Office.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Spain
- Charles Radcliffe, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
- Jenny Gabriela Almendares, Vice-Secretary of State for Justice and Human Rights of Honduras
- Mariela Castro Espín, Director of the National Center for Sexual Education of Cuba
- Paula Uribe, U.S. Department of State.
- Natalia Sorzano, Department of Indigenous Affairs, Minorities and Rom of Colombia
Room: Sala Botella
Sexuality and Elderly People in Spain, organized by the Foundation for Socio-Educational
Intervention - FISED
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Chair:
- Mónica Ramos Toro, Fundación FISED, Spain
Presenters:
- Santiago Frago Valls, Sexologist for Elderly People, Amaltea Institute. Zaragoza City Council, Spain
- Ana Freixas Farré, Universidad de Córdoba, Spain
- Javier Barbero Gutiérrez, Hospital La Paz - Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
programme
Special Session 2:
15
Room: Sala Laín
Special Session 3:
Forty years of Gay Liberation: What does it mean for Global Sexual Politics?
Session Language: English
Chair and presenter:
- Dennis Altman, La Trobe University, Australia
Presenters:
- Raquel (Lucas) Platero, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
- Violeta Barrientos, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos de Lima, Peru
- Eli Bou Merhy, OSE, Organization for Sexual Education, Lebanon
Room: Sala Schüller
Special Session 4:
Sexual Rights Activism in Middle East and Northern Africa, organized by
the Hivos Foundation and IASSCS
Session Language: English
Chair:
- Paul Jansen, HIVOS, Netherlands
Presenters:
- Muhammad Abd el Halim, consultant for the Palestinian support line of the LGBTIQ
community of Aswat- Palestinian Gay women and Alqaws
- Madian Al Jazerah, LGBT activist in Jordania
- Rauda Morcos, Regional and Community organizer, MENA region, Hivos Foundation
Plenary Panel 1 (09:00 - 11:00 hrs)
Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Facing cultural diversity in the recognition of Sexual Rights as Human Rights
Keynote Address: Discussants: Chair: Shereen El Feki, Vice-chair of the new Global Commission on HIV and the Law
Barbara Klugman, Consultant, Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights,
South Africa
Eszter Kismodi, Department of Reproductive Health and Research, WHO
Sonia Correa, Brazil (to be confirmed)
FRIDAY, July 08th
Parallel Session 3 (11:30 - 13:00 hrs)
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Session Title: Diversity, Power, Liberation (Arts and SI 02)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Alejandro Melero, Spain
16
PRESENTERS:
• Matryoshka: queer meanings of the Russian doll
Olga Arnaiz, Spain
•
•
•
Representaciones cinematográficas de la sexualidad de las personas con diversidad funcional
Pablo Cantero Garlito, Spain
LGTB activism in the first erotic press of the Spanish democracy
Alejandro Melero, Spain
Mother-daughter relationship and sexuality in the contemporary Spanish film My life
without me (Mi vida sin mí, Isabel Coixet, 2003)
Beatriz Herrero, Spain
Room: Sala Botella
Session Title: Globalization and Sexual Markets (ST 01)
Session Language: English and Spanish
Session Chair: Alejandro Melero, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• Sex, money and “love”: Global exchanges involving Brazilian women
Adriana Piscitelli, Brazil
• La trata de niñas y adolescentes para la explotación en el turismo sexual en la Amazonía
peruana
Jaris Mujica, Peru
• “Prostitution,” “Sexual Work,” or “Sexual Service”?: Conceptual Analysis for the Study of
Commercial Sex Between Men
Porfirio Hernández, Mexico
• New regulations, emerging subjects: sexuality and the market in contemporary Mexico
Ana Amuchástegui, Mexico
Room: Sala Laín
Session Title: Advanced Critical Sexuality Studies: A Training Program
(ASPR 02)
PRESENTERS:
• Reflections on developing an advanced short course in Critical Sexuality Studies
Gillian Fletcher, Australia
• Lessons Learned from implementation in South America – Lima
Carlos Cáceres, Peru
• Lessons Learned from implementation in Vietnam – Hanoi
Hong Khuat Thu, Vietnam
• ASSC Planning for South Africa – Durban
Lebo Motselane, South Africa
• IASSCS future short course initiatives
Diane di Mauro, USA
Room: Sala Shüller
Session Title: Reviewing and Evaluating the Developments in the Field of
Gender (GFSE 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Ana Porroche, United Kingdom
programme
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Gary Dowsett, Australia
17
PRESENTERS:
• Global Trend Towards Gender Equality: Nigeria’s Experience in Focus
Sylvia Ifemeje, Nigeria
• “A ‘real’ man must be active, a ‘real’ woman must be submissive”: The discourse of
sexuality in today Vietnam
Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao, Vietnam
• Social exclusion and gender violence on women penitentiary in Andalusia
Bárbara Sordi Stock, Spain
• The invisibility of violence against lesbian women: the case of corrective rape
Glenys de Jesús Checo, Spain
• Sexuality, Rights and Development: Peruvian Feminist Connections
Carolyn Williams, United Kingdom
Room: Aula 7
Session Title: Sexuality and Disability in Southern Africa (NNB 05)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Poul Rohleder, United Kingdom
Discussant: Chrissie Rogers, United Kingdom
PRESENTERS:
• Disabled women negotiating sexuality: Stories from Malawi and South Africa
Stine Hellum Braatheen, United Kingdom
• Disability, sexuality and HIV risk
Poul Rohleder, United Kingdom
• Moral and Religious Conflict and HIV/AIDS Education in Schools for the Deaf and Hard of
Hearing in South Africa
Sumaya Mall, United Kingdom
• Discourses of disability and the shaping of sexuality in disabled children in the time of
HIV/AIDS in South Africa
Judy Mckenzie, South Africa
Room: Aula 8
Session Title: Sex, Sexualities and Subjectivity (PDSI 03)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Gilbert Herdt, USA
18
PRESENTERS:
• Sexual Fluidity and Social Opportunity: The Role of Gender and Age in the Social
Construction of Long-term individual variability of sexual expression
Gilbert Herdt, USA
• Pleasure in Young Women’s Sexual Health and Rights: The Study of Young Women in
West Java, Indonesia
Diana Pakasi, Indonesia
• In search of recognition: multiple and concurrent sexual relationships in South Africa
Nolwazi Mkhwanazi, South Africa
• Affectivity and Production of Subjectivities: Eroticism, consumer and networks in
anonymous groups of self-help
Carolina Branco de Castro Ferreira, Brazil
Room: Aula 10
Session Title: Diversity in the Era of the New Media (S2.0 03)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Eva Alcántara Zavala, Mexico
PRESENTERS:
• Intersexualidad y redes transnacionales: reflexiones del caso México
Eva Alcántara Zavala, Mexico
• Young women and online sexualities in South Africa
Tanja Bosch, South Africa
• Polyamory: gender and non-monogamy on the Internet
Daniel Cardoso, Portugal
• Blackberry Smartphone (BB) and sexual Lifestyles among Thai Lesbian University
Students in Bangkok
Pimpawun Boonmongkon, Thailand
Room: Aula 11
Session Title: Regional Dynamics in Sexuality and Politics: Common
Threads and Differences (SS 07)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Sonia Correa, Brazil
PRESENTERS:
• Sexuality and politics in Africa: Challenges of Research and Practice
Cesnabmihilo Dorothy Aken’ova, Nigeria
• State and sexual politics in Latin America: the challenges of breaking through
Mario Pecheny, Argentina
• Sexualities and States in Asia: Identities and Population Mobility
Malu Marin, Philippines
Room: Aula 12
Session Title: Women and Gender Violence (SS 08)
PRESENTERS:
• The fight against homophobic violence in schools: a political and institutional issue
Line Chamberland, Canada
• Women and Violence: analysis of the victims narratives within specialized legal services
for women
Andréa Fachel Leal, Brazil
• Gender, sexuality and violence in middle schools and high schools in the region
Rhône-Alpes (France)
Rommel Mendes-Leite, France
• Experiences and Perception of Sexual Violence among Female Undergraduates in
Calabar, Nigeria
Bridget Nwagbara, Nigeria
• Anti-homophobia education in Canada: exploring opportunities and constraints in the
context of multiculturalism
Hélène Frohard-Dourlent, Canada
programme
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Rommel Mendes-Leite, France
19
Room: Aula 13
Session Title: Having Sex with HIV: Emerging Responses (HIVSI 01)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Asha Persson, Australia
PRESENTERS:
• Sex, Danger and Inequalities
Alan Brown, Canada
• “Doing well”. Gay Party Circuits in the Times of Mental Health Epidemiology
Laurent Gaissad, Belgium
• Between abstinence, responsibility and pleasure: sexual challenges for HIV infected
Slovenian men who have sex with men
Ales Lamut, Slovenia
• Non/infectious bodies: A qualitative analysis of HIV corporeality in the wake of the Swiss
Consensus Statement
Asha Persson, Australia
Room: Aula 16
Session Title: Researching Violence against Women-Loving-Women and
MTF Persons (BH 05)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Nursyahbani Katjasungkana, Indonesia
Discussant: Horacio Sívori, Brazil
PRESENTERS:
• Mapping violence against Women-loving-Women
Sumita Banbhopadyay, India
• Crosscultural research on Women-loving-women and FTM’s
Saskia Wieringa, Netherlands
• Misconceptions about the risks involved in lesbian bisexual and women who have sex
with women in Botswana
Lorraine Setuke, Botswana
• Rebuilding Self Esteem in Lesbian in Surabaya
Dian Yulia Arianti, Indonesia
Parallel Session 4 (15:00 - 16:30 hrs)
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Session Title: Responses to Sex Work Vulnerabilities (HIVSI 03)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Consuelo Hernández, Spain
20
PRESENTERS:
• Características socio-psico-sexuales de Mujeres Transexuales que se dedican al trabajo
sexual en Barcelona
Percy Fernández Dávila, Spain
• “It’s good we’re strong girls”: Safe sex, agency and necessity among sex workers in Fiji
Karen McMillan, Australia • Supporting Transgender Sex Workers
Pete Clark, United Kingdom
• Equality for sex workers? Sex workers as members of the community and their right to
be safe
Tracey Sagar, United Kingdom
• Developing Support Services for Sex Workers: The Value of Participatory Action
Research and the role of Peer Mentorship
Harris Emma, United Kingdom
Room: Sala Botella
Session Title: Women and Sexuality: Open Debates and Challenges
(GFSE 02)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Maribel Blázquez, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• El debate sobre la prostitución
Beatriz Gimeno Reinoso, Spain
• Female genital mutilation-sexual concerns and medical ethics
Elise Johansen, Egypt
• Gendered virginity, heterosexual inequality, and non-egalitarian heterosexual
relationships in contemporary Iran
Ali Amirmoayed, Iran
• Female Sexual Perpetration Made Visible: A review of the current literature
Sherianne Kramer, South Africa
• Cultura, sexualidad y poder: una reflexión sobre la construcción del cuerpo femenino en
el pueblo embera chamí
Reina González Henao, Colombia
Room: Sala Laín
Session Title: Gender and Visual Arts (Arts & SI 03)
PRESENTERS:
• Fallen Women and Disgraced Men: Gender, Sexuality and the Patriarchal Nation in
Puerto Rican Cinema
Radost Rangelova, USA
• Sexual inequality and gender stereotyping in contemporary Video Games: A case study
of StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty & Call of Duty: Black Ops
Marc Jungblut, USA
• Storyboarding: using the arts to promote the sexual health and emotional wellbeing of
older Australians
Catherine Barrett, Australia
Room: Sala Shüller
Session Title: Rainbow Families (BH 06)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: M.-Mar González, Spain
programme
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Radost Rangelova, USA
21
PRESENTERS:
• Sexually Diverse Parents and Their Families: Experiences in Research in the State of
Veracruz, Mexico
Ruth Mónica Díaz Sánchez, Mexico
• Beyond Equality: The Construction of Sexual Orientation in Sons and Daughters of
Lesbian Mothers or Gay Fathers
Francisca López Gaviño, Spain
• Attitudes Towards Lesbian and Gay Parenting
Jorge Gato, Portugal
• Motherlike fathers? Gender in Spanish gay father families and around them
Marcin Smietana, Spain
Room: Aula 7
Session Title: Sexuality, Inequality and HIV: Challenges in a Globalized
World (HIVSI 02)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Laurent Gaissad, Belgium
PRESENTERS:
• Beyond the abc in HIV/Aids prevention: a systematic literature review of sexual
education programs for young people
John Estrada Montoya, Colombia
• Creating an enabling environment for reproductive and sexual health in Africa
Samantha Willan, South Africa
• Mainstreaming the Red Ribbon: AIDS NGO Governance and the Deployment of
Sexualities in Taiwan
Hans Huang, Taiwan
• Sexual and reproductive rights in Mexican HIV care: Barriers and progress
Tamil Kendall, Canada
Room: Aula 8
Session Title: Creating and Questioning Sexual Identities (BH 10)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Aaron Balick, United Kingdom
PRESENTERS:
• A Disservice to the Historical Homosexual and Related Sexual and Gender Identities:
reconsidering contemporary discourses on the social construction of identities
Aaron Balick, United Kingdom
• Forming and Framing Filipino Female Masculinities and Same-sex Identities
Jennifer Josef, Philippines
• The LGBT Movement/Sector
Kirk Fiereck, USA
Room: Aula 10
22
Session Title: Collaborative Partnerships to Explore Diverse Sexualities
in Australia and New Zealand: Addressing Inequities within Sexuality
Education (SS 09)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Aspin Clive, Australia
PRESENTERS:
• The role of traditional knowledge in understanding contemporary Maori sexuality:
Implications for sexuality education
Clive Aspin, Australia
• Take your partners, please: Negotiating critical sexuality education research
partnerships in high stakes times
Kathleen Quinlivan, Australia
• Sexuality education and indigeneity in Australia and New Zealand: A literature review
Mary Lou Rasmusen, Australia
Room: Aula 11
Session Title: Sex Education in Schools (SS 10)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Ani Colekessian, Canada
PRESENTERS:
• The Politics of Youth Sexuality: Civil Society and School-Based Sex Education in Croatia
Amir Hodžic, Croatia
• Informing Sexuality: Mapping sexual discourse for culturally-aware curricula in Armenia
Ani Colekessian, Canada
• Teasing, Jokes, and Power: Language Socialization of Gender and Sexuality Norms
Susan Woolley, USA
• Parental Support and Teachers’ Readiness for Elementary Sexuality Education in Primary
Schools in Southwestern Nigeria
Bayode Popoola, Nigeria
Room: Aula 12
Session Title: Sexual Markets, Pornography and Online Dating (S2.0 04)
PRESENTERS:
• Porn for women. Alternative desire and emancipated lust? Creation and consumption of
female porn
Verena Kuckenberger, Austria
• Projecting Pornography, Enacting (In)Equality, and Mexican Modernity
Ageeth Sluis, USA
• Self Regulated Safety: First Hand Experiences in the Porn Industry
Nica Ross, USA
• Online Dating - New Sexual Territories, New Normative Boundaries
Marie Bergström, France
• Imagined Romances: the Internet, Transnational Romances and Global Sexual Markets
Ernesto Vásquez del Aguila, Ireland
programme
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Ernesto Vásquez del Aguila, Ireland
23
Room: Aula 13
Session Title: Gaining Recognition through Social Movements (SS 15)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Yasmine Rola, Lebannon
PRESENTERS:
• Homophobia in the clinical setting in Lebanon
Faysal El Kak, Lebanon
• Challenges in debates on human rights and LGBT social movements in Brazil
Ilana Mountian, United Kingdom
• In Search of New Traditions among Sexual Dissidents in Turkey
Habibe Baba, Canada
• Lost Ground, Gained Ground, and Fractured Ground: The literal fight for our lives at the
United Nations
Kenita Placide, Canada
Room: Aula 16
Session Title: Gendered Mobilities and Borders (SS 11)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Carmen Romero, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• Constructing Sexualities: The Sexualized Borders and The Emerging State Power
Fatema Jahan, Bangladesh
• And Your Sidewalks Will Lead Straight to Me: How Black Queer Youth Stake Claim to
Chicago’s Boystown
Rhaisa Williams, USA
• Being “gay” and immigrant in a secular minority society: the complexities of an
intersectional self
Olivier Roy, Canada
• Exploring Cultural Diversity: Examining Power Relationships within the Realms of Art
and Art Education
Nina Lasky, USA
• Lesbian migrants between Lima and Milan: possible topics of research and
methodological issues
Helen Ibry, Italy
Parallel Special Sessions (17:00 - 19:00 hrs)
Room : Sala Botella
Special Session 5:
LGBT Activism in Latin America, organized by the Spanish LGBT Federation - FELGTB
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
24
Chair:
- Beatriz Gimeno. Feminist/LGBT writer and activist, Spain
Presenters:
- Ana Lucía Almeida Vélez, Ecuador
- Hernando Muñoz Sánchez, Colombia
- Liz Cabrel, Peru
Room : Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Special Session 6:
HIV Prevention New Deal: Gay Health and Biomedical Interventions among MSM
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Chair:
- Laurent Gaissad, Université Libre de Bruxelles / Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre
Presenter:
- Marsha Rosengarten, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK
Discussants:
- Vladimir Martens, Observatoire du Sida et des Sexualités, Bruxelles
- Carlos Cáceres, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Peru
- Vincent Douris, Sidaction France
Room : Sala Laín
Special Session 7:
Promoting Sexual Justice: Advocacy, Front-line Activism, and Academic Researchlessons learned, emerging opportunities, organized by IRN and IASSCS
Session Language: English
Chairs:
- Mark Blasius, USA
- Richmond Tiemoko, Ivory Coast
Presenters:
- Dorothy Aken’Ova, ASHOKA fellow, International Centre for Reproductive Health and Sexual
Rights (INCRESE)
- Abha Bhaiya, IASSCS Board member
- Jasmin Blessing, Coordinator of the Latin American region of the IRN
- Rosamond King, CLAGS and IRN member
SATURDAY, July 09th
Plenary Panel 3 (09:30 - 11:30 hrs)
Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Keynote Address: Discussants: Chair: Gilbert Herdt, San Francisco State University, USA
Katherine Lepani, Australian National University Canberra, Australia
José Antonio Nieto, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain
Carlos Cáceres, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Peru
Parallel Session 5 (11:45 - 13:15 hrs)
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
Session Title: HIV and Gender (HIVSI 05)
programme
From Ritual to Inequality: how modernity changes sexuality
25
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Maribel Blázquez, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• The Gender Cut: A Study on the Perception of Adolescent Girls and Boys on Male
Circumcision in Kojwach Division, Rachuonyo County
Josephine Ochieng’, Kenya
• Mujeres, sexualidad y SIDA
Purificación Heras González, Spain
• Rural Women views about Sexual Health, HIV/AIDS and female autonomy in Khyber
Pukhtunkhwa Province (KP) – Pakistan.
Abid Ali, Pakistan
• Campaña por la Vida de las Jóvenes y los Jóvenes, una Prevención Integral del VIH
Juana Mercado Alcántara, Mexico
• Deconstruyendo la Sexualidad: Talleres de Fin de Semana para Hombres Gays y
Bisexuales
Rubén Mora Mesquida, Spain
Room: Sala Botella
Session Title: Exclusion, sexuality and power (NNB 04)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Julieta Vartabedian, Spain
PRESENTERS:
• Who’s representation is it anyways?: The productivity of social and academic exclusion
in generating new knowledge about sexuality and gender
Treena Orchard, Canada
• Nombrando la diferencia. Sobre travestis brasileñas y la construcción de identidades
transgenéricas
Julieta Luciana Vartabedian
• Triplemente vulnerabilizadas. Prostitutas, inmigrantes y transexuales
Ángel Manuel Amaro Quintas, Spain
• Language, Bioethics, and Objectivity in the Treatment of Intersex Infants
Ashley Aberg, USA
Room: Sala Laín
Session Title: Homophobia: challenges and opportunities (BH 07)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Angelo Costa, Brazil
26
PRESENTERS:
• Documenting Cases of Violence Against Poor LBTs in the Philippines
Anne Marie Kristine Lim, Philippines
• The effects of sexual prejudice on the mental health of gays and lesbians in Antofagasta,
Chile
Jaime Barrientos, Chile
• Exploring sexuality in the LGTBIQ community, creatively confronting internal
homophobia
Betty Cabrel, Peru
• Systematic Review of Instruments measuring Homophobia and related constructs
Angelo Costa, Brazil
Room: Sala Shüller
Session Title: Mobility, vulnerability and HIV (HIVSI 04)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Carlos Cáceres, Peru
PRESENTERS:
• The High Risk Sexual Behaviour and Strategies for the Prevention of STDs/HIV among
MSM and Male Transvestite in Jayapura-Papua, Indonesia
Maimunah Munir, Indonesia
• Young Mexicans: migration and sexual freedom, gender transformation and partner
classification
Itzel Eguiluz, Spain
• Closing a gap: WHO guidelines for HIV/STI health sector interventions for MSM and
transgender people
Carlos Cáceres, Peru
Room: Aula 7
Session Title: Research Investments on Sexual Rights in Latin America
(PDSI 04)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Maria Luiza Heilborn, Brazil
PRESENTERS:
• The emergence, development and contradictions of sexology in Latin America: between
globalization and national approaches
Jane Russo, Brazil
• Sexuality and Rights in Latin America: balance of an intellectual movement
Sergio Carrara, Brazil
• Female sexuality facing abortion: a social-anthropological study with young women in
three Latin American cities
Maria Luiza Heilborn, Brazil
• Normalizing or dissent: the legalization of same-sex unions in Mexico City
Rodrigo Parrini, Mexico
Room: Aula 8
Session Title: Shaping and reproducing gendered discourses (GFSE 03)
PRESENTERS:
• Mothers, Wet Nurses and Effeminate Peruvians
Magally Alegre-Henderson, Peru
• The Naked Truth: The Media’s Role in Undermining Female Political Candidates
Kimberly Adams, USA
• Agency, Feminism and Reproduction: Sterilization in Brazil
Ugo Edu, USA
• La Mujer Resiliente: de Víctima a Responsable
Alicia Elena Rodríguez, Mexico
programme
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Kimberly Adams, USA
27
Room: Aula 10
Session Title: Feminism and rights (GFSE 04)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Grace Waichigo, South Africa
PRESENTERS:
• Feminism: A Cosset for the White Woman, a Mirage for the African Woman
Joshua Adekeye, Nigeria
• “Let the world know we are out to misbehave”: Re-configuring the good-time-girl
Grace Waichigo, South Africa
• Enjoying sex, praise virginity – a women’s agency to be seen as virtuous
Van Anh Nguyen, Vietnam
Room: Aula 11
Session Title: Using human rights to examine the effects of law on
sexuality and sexual health (SS 14)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Eszter Kismodi, Switzerland
PRESENTERS:
• Sexuality Information and Education in South Africa: strategic challenges when human
rights law is not enough
Barbara Klugman, South Africa
• Human rights and the effect of laws and policies on sexuality and sexual health: some
key issues and examples
Jane Cottingham, Switzerland
• De-pathologizing transgender identity : Placing trans* healthcare in a framework of
human rights
Mauro Cabral, Argentina
Room: Aula 12
Session Title: Electronic Sociability, Gender, Sexuality and Internet
Regulation (S2.0 05)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Sonia Correa, Brazil
PRESENTERS:
• EROTICS-Brazil
Horacio Sívori, Brazil
• EROTICS-India
Indira Maya Ganesh, India
• EROTICS-USA
Kevicha Echols, USA
• EROTICS- South Africa
Relebohile Moletsane
28
Room: Aula 13
Session Title: Masculinities and public policies (PDSI 02)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Genaro Castro-Vasquez, Singapore
PRESENTERS:
• ‘His phimotic foreskin’: Women’s views on Gender, Sexuality, Health and Male
Circumcision in Japan
Genaro Castro-Vasquez, Singapore
• Exploring the performance of masculinities in the lives of Irish drug using sex workers
Paul Ryan, Ireland
• Masculinity and penal execution: from the imprisonment to the escape lines
Cíntia Santos, Brazil
• Políticas públicas y prácticas institucionales en torno a la vasectomía en Uruguay: ¿(des)
igualdades persistentes en la implementación de servicios integrales de salud sexual y
reproductiva?
Valeria Grabino Etorena, Uruguay
• Power and (homo)affect in a global prison context: thinking sexual inequalities in the
São Paulo State women’s Penitentiary
Natália Padovani, Brazil
Room: Aula 16
Session Title: Embodying Gender (NNB 03)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Jayanthi Kuru-Utumpala, Sri Lanka
PRESENTERS:
• Butching It Up: An Analysis of Female Masculinity in Sri Lanka
Jayanthi Kuru-Utumpala, Sri Lanka
• Sexing the Phallusy: Psychoanalytic Ontologies and the Medicalization of Intersex
Kit Heintzmann, Germany
• Homosexuality and the Rhetoric of Corporeality in News Print Sources during Vietnam’s
Renovation Period, 1986-2005
Quang-Anh (Richard) Tran, USA
Parallel Session 6 (13:45 - 15:30 hrs)
Session Title: Religion and sexuality (GFSE 06)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Monica Tabengwa, Botswana
PRESENTERS:
• Politics, religion and gender equality in contemporary Mexico
Ana Amuchástegui, Mexico
• Reproducing the Catholic Nation: Reproduction, Morality and Citizenship in the
Philippines
Maria Dulce Natividad, USA
programme
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
29
• African sovereignty, nationalism, traditional and religious fundamentalism, Can they
TRUMP universal human rights?
Monica Tabengwa, Botswana
• El rol de las religiones en la construcción de sociedades con justicia sexual y
reproductiva: una propuesta católica feminista
Teresa Lanza Monje, Bolivia
• Ensayo de un mapa de la desigualdad sexual, un caso latinoamericano
Violeta Barrientos, Peru
Room: Sala Botella
Session Title: Sexuality, Sexual Health and Disability (NNB 06)
Session Language: English and Spanish (simultaneous translation)
Session Chair: Adriana Rosales, Mexico
PRESENTERS:
• Autonomy, social inclusion and sexuality among people with intellectual disability in
Mexico: ideas for sex education materials
Adriana Leona Rosales, Mexico
• Sexual and Gender inequity among people living with disability in Thailand
Penchan Sherer, Thailand
• El entrecruzamiento de la discriminación: sexualidad en personas con enfermedad
mental
Pablo A.Cantero Garlito, Spain
• Sexuality, Culture and Disability: Experiences on Parkinson’s disease
Josefina Franzoni, Mexico
Room: Sala Laín
Session Title: Institutional approach to sexual diversity: Psychology,
Law, Enterprises, Care (BH 08)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Jose Gabilondo, USA
PRESENTERS:
• Challenging hegemonies within LGBTQI psychology
Tracy Hipp, USA
• Beyond Coming Out: Rhetorical Strategies for Dealing with Postlapsarian
Heterosexuality
Jose Gabilondo, USA
• Between stabilizing and dissolving Inequalities within organizations – the impact of
diversity management focusing on “sexual orientation”
Thomas Köllen, Germany
• Diversity in the corporate social responsibility area: the (almost invisible) place of
homosexuality
João Bôsco Góis, Brazil
Room: Sala Shüller
30
Session Title: The pandemic of sexual violence: domestic and
adolescents violence (GFSE 05)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Van Anh Nguyen, Vietnam
PRESENTERS:
• Study about domestic violence and women’s work outside home
Luiza Salgado Nader, Brazil
• Sexual abuse to adolescents in Vietnam
Van Anh Nguyen, Vietnam
• Gender and sexuality among married people: a case study of Mbare high density
suburb, Harare, Zimbabwe.
James January, Zimbabwe
Room: Aula 7
Session Title: Confronting sexual exclusion: Remaining gaps in the HIV
response (HIVSI 06)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: María Raguz, Peru
PRESENTERS:
• Sexual rights discourse, heteronormative representations of sexuality and gender,
and HIV stigma and discrimination in heterosexuals and LGBTQI: A metanalysis and
implications for action
María Raguz, Peru
• Disrupting Heteronormativity: Reflections on Research into the Sexual Health and Rights
of Lesbian and Bisexual Women living in Peri-Urban and Rural Areas in South Africa
Jill Henderson, South Africa
• Sexual myths and the adoption of safer sexual practices: A case study from Tshwane,
South Africa
Rory du Plessis, South Africa
• Sexual Inequality and Increased HIV infection among married couples in Ogun State,
Nigeria
Yewande Ogunnubi, Nigeria
Room: Aula 8
Session Title: Power, resistance and the new media (S2.0 06)
PRESENTERS:
• Psychological correlates of differences in infidelity definitions among young adults
Magdalena Mijas, Poland
• Mujeres, sexualidad y medios
Josefina Hernández Téllez, Mexico
• Breaking the ice or making it harder? An analysis of Zimbabwe’s media discourse on sex
and sexuality
Fungai Machirori, United Kingdom
• Archive on same sex history in Vietnam
Anh Tu Hoang, Vietnam
programme
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Josefina Hernández Téllez, Mexico
31
Room: Aula 10
LGBT Movement and State (SS 16)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: David Paternotte, Belgium
PRESENTERS:
• Legislating (Female/Lesbian) Sexuality: Colonial Laws and Post Colonial Impact
Dyuti Ailawadi, India
• Antigay Violence and the Culturalization of Citizenship in the Netherlands
Laurens Buijs, Netherlands
• GLBT Rights and National Discourse: The (Trans)National Politics of Sexual Freedom in
Israel
Gross Aeyal, Israel
• From Franco to Zapatero: A political and social history of the gay and lesbian movement
in Spain
Rommel Mendès-Leite, France
Room: Aula 11
Homophobia and its practices (SS 17)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Judit Takacs, Hungary
PRESENTERS:
• Public Policies and Homophobia: an international comparative analysis
Henrique Nardi, Brazil
• Social Acceptance of Lesbian Women and Gay Men in Europe and in Hungary
Judit Takacs, Hungary
• A State of Arousal - Eroticism and Violence in the making of Homophobia in India
Akshay Khanna, United Kingdom
• Queering Reparations
Steven Blevins, USA
Room: Aula 12
Session Title: Raising Awareness about Heteronormativity (BH 09)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Bridgette Sheridan, USA
PRESENTERS:
• Inscribing Inclusivity, Queering Every Classroom
Lisa Eck, USA
• Overview: A theory of sexualities activism for intellectuals with no budget
Virginia Rutter , USA
• Born or Made? The Problem of Essentialism in Sexuality
Bridgette Sheridan, USA
32
Room: Aula 13
Session Title: Methodological Interventions in Sexuality Education
Research in Australia and New Zealand (ASPR 04)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Mary Rasmussen, Australia
PRESENTERS:
• Historicising Sexualities Education: disciplinary challenges to the health-based teaching
of sex and sexualities in schools
Daniel Marshall, Australia
• Engaging Productively With ‘At Risk’ Discourses To Work With Sexual And Gender
Normativity In New Zealand High Schools: A Gay Straight Alliance Story
Kathleen Quinlivan, Australia
• Screening Sexuality Education
Mary Rasmusen, Australia
Room: Aula 16
Session Title: Bodies: pleasures and vulnerabilities (PDSI 05)
Session Language: English
Session Chair: Jennifer Smit
PRESENTERS:
• Vaginal practices in Tete province, Mozambique: Qualitative and quantitative research
Brigitte Bagnol, South Africa
• Vaginal practices and implications for use of condoms, contraceptives and microbicides
Jennifer Smit, South Africa
• Deseos y Placeres Quemados
Rosa María del Carmen Pimentel Cortez, Peru
• Manners and bodies: desire, difference and youthful sociability in the historic downtown
of São Paulo
Julio Simoes, Brazil
Closing Session (15:30 - 16:00 hrs)
Room: Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
IASSCS and CHS Award Ceremonies
Representative from Hivos:
- Ben Witjes, Director Programmes and Projects, Netherlands
Representative from the Spanish LGBT Federation - FELGTB:
- Antonio Poveda, President, Spain
Representative from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid:
- Heriberto Cairo, Dean, Spain
Institutional Representatives:
- Diane Di Mauro, Chair of the IASSCS Board, Columbia University, USA
- José Ignacio Pichardo Galán, Conference Convener, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
programme
Closing Ceremony
33
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
July 07th and 08th open all day
Authors available for discussion between 13:00 and 14:00 hrs
POSTER DISPLAY AREA
Gender, feminism(s) and the struggle for sexual equality.
GFSE 01 Violence against women by their intimate partner
Ana Paula Garcia / Brazil
GFSE 02 Problematizing Gender and Race Articulation in Domestic Violence Perpetrated
Against African-Brazilian Women
Raquel da Silva / Brazil
GFSE 03 Myths and Realities of Lesbians’ Health
Patrícia Curzi / Brazil
GFSE 04 Political Rights for Sexual and Gender Equality
Samantha Willan / South Africa
Development work and the reproduction of sexual inequality
DWRSI 01 Libyan women, their sexuality rights and reproductive health
Mahmoud Shaima / Egypt
HIV/AIDS and sexual inequality
34
HIVSI 01 Experience of Sexuality of Persons Infected with Human Immunodeficiency
Virus (HIV): A Case Study
Marcela Coromina / Spain
HIVSI 02 HIV/AIDS among Refugee Women In Uganda
Patrick Arinaitwe / Uganda
HIVSI 04 Evaluación de la intervención “Prevenir para Disfrutar”
Nuria Bertrán de Bes / Spain
HIVSI 05 Understanding Male to Male Sex in Vietnam
Quach Trang / Vietnam
HIVSI 06 Sexual Rights Discourse, Heteronormative Representations of Sexuality and
Gender, and HIV Stigma and Discrimination in Heterosexuals and LGBTQI:
A Metanalysis and Implications for Action
María Raguz / Peru
HIVSI 07 Encuesta de Opinión sobre Factores de Vulnerabilidad al VIH en Jóvenes de
Preparatorias Públicas
Minerva Santamaría / Mexico
HIVSI 10 Vivencia de la Sexualidad y Vulnerabilidad Sexual en Jóvenes Gays y
Bisexuales de Barcelona
Percy Fernández-Dávila / Spain
HIVSI 11 Youth and HIV/AIDS sexual risk: Gender and Ethnic Inequalities
María Brak-Lamy / Portugal
SS 01 A Woman’s Road to Salvation?
Ana Santos / Philippines
SS 02 Consejería en Salud Sexual y Reproductiva: Un Modelo Paraguayo
Ariel González Galeano / Paraguay
SS 03 Gays and Nats in Myanmar
Douglas Sanders / Thailand
SS 04 Bionomía y transexualidad: el cuerpo y el derecho
Víctor Manuel Merino i Sancho / Spain
SS 05 Displays of Affection and Sexuality in an Alentejo Village
Vanda Silva / Portugal
SS 06 Reflexiones sobre la Legalización del Matrimonio entre Personas del Mismo
Sexo y la Adopción en la Ciudad de México
Carlos Fonseca / Mexico
SS 07 Educational Intervention in Cuban Universities to Promote the Acceptance of
Individuals’ Sexual Orientation
Yasmany Figueroa Díaz / Cuba
SS 08 Moralising and Criminalising: the Suppression of Sexual Freedom in Zimbabwe
Sian Maseko / Zimbabwe
SS 09 Heterosexist Harassment in Australia: The Limits of Comparative Analyses of
Sexual Rights in Western and Non-Western Jurisdictions
William Leonard / Australia
Pleasure, desire and sexual (in)equality
PDSI 01 Construction and Curtailment of Female Sexuality and Pleasure in
South African Self-help Sex Manuals
Rory du Plessis / South Africa
Academia and sexual power relations in the house of sciences
ASPR 01 We are diverse but no different: Why do Spanish gay fathers say what they say?
Story performance analysis
Marcin Smietana / Spain
programme
Sexualized states. From sexual repression to sexual democracies:
The role of the law, public policies, education, medicine and religion
35
The races, ethnicities, social classes and ages of sexual (in)equality
RESASI 01
Response of Islamic Institutions on HIV/AIDS And Sexual Education
Hameed ul Mehdi / Pakistan
RESASI 02 Género y desigualdad sexual: análisis de los esquemas culturales que
repercuten en la vivencia de la sexualidad después de la menopausia
Ana María Martín Casado / Spain
RESASI 03 La Igualdad del Ingenerado, Principio del Orden Social
Lilian Fernández / Ecuador
RESASI 04 Role of Islamic Scholars to Address HIV, Reproductive/ Sexual Health
Hameed Ul Mehdi / Pakistan
Translating (in)equality: cultural globalization of both sexual discrimination and sexual rights
TI 01 Abortion and Sexual Violence: The Vulnerability’s Context among Youth Women
Flávia Pilecco / Brazil
Sexuality 2.0: internet, the media and online social networks constructing
and deconstructing sexual images, relations and practices
Sexuality 2.0 01 The Power of Fashion: Imagining the Other Sexuality Urban Nairobi
Mary Ngugi / Kenya
Sexuality 2.0 02 Heterosexual casual sex ‘advice’: A guide to sexual in/equality?
Panteá Farvid / New Zealand
Sexuality 2.0 05 Adolescents’ Sexual Health and Bodily Rights from Perception to Practice
Yehia Gado / Egypt
The arts performing, reproducing and questioning sexual inequalities
36
Arts and SI 01 Linage and Family Continuity: A Case Study of Female Marriages in the
Contex of Patriarchy Dominated Systems
Wanjiru Gichuhi / Kenya
Arts and SI 02 Desiring Body
Siska Dewi / Indonesia
WORKSHOPS
July 07th, 16:30 to 19:00 hrs
Room: Aula 5
Editors’ Meeting: Setting standards for capacity building in academic
writing in SRHR.
This meeting, co-organized by ESE:O and IASSCS, aims at moving the conversation forward
regarding how to promote an increase of publications by young researchers from the South of
high-quality, rights-based research in SRHR in leading international journals, and how to evaluate
initiatives aimed at democratizing the field. The meeting will focus on developing strategies to
provide standards and indicators to measure the success and impact of capacity building and
knowledge transfer programs in scientific writing and networking.
By invitation only.
July 08th, 17:00 to 19:00 hrs
Room: Sala Shüller
Capacity building in academic writing for publication on SRHR: The ESE:O
Methodology and experience.
This workshop aims to create awareness about serious barriers that prevent researchers from the
South to have access to publication in leading peer-reviewed journals in the field of Sexuality and
Reproductive Health and Rights, by sharing the experience of a South-South collaboration project
of capacity building in academic writing.
For further information please contact:
Soledad Falabella and/or Sergio Missana
[email protected]
programme
The workshop will provide basic tools for facing the challenge of writing and publishing in
internationally recognized peer-reviewed journals, focusing on strategies for presenting research
to specific international audiences. During the workshop, participants will put together a basic
outline for an academic paper and will learn practical skills for planning writing and targeting it to
specific publications.
37
EXHIBITS
July 07th and 08th
Exhibits Area (Level 01)
Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal (Level 02)
Sala Profesor Botella (Level 01)
The following exhibits will present research results and/or analytical reflections based on activist or
mobilizing experiences previously conducted. The selection of works presented here was reviewed
by a small curational committee formed by artists, scholars and activists with experience working
in the arts or cultural activism.
The exhibits will be presented in the Exhibits Area on level 01 during the Conference. The screenings
will be presented in Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal (level 02) and Sala Botella (level 01).
PARTICIPANTS
• Ana Lucía Almeida
Real versus Fake
Exhibit and Video
• Betty Cabrel
Vulvalución: Art women’s expressions of empowerment in Peru
Exhibit and Video
PERU
• Colectivo Bochinche / Fernando Olivos
¡Bochinche! Intervención contra la violencia hacía las trabajadoras sexuales
Exhibit and Video
PERU
• Colectivo Alócate / Fernando Olivos
Contra la homofobia… Alocate.pe!
Exhibit and Video
PERU
•
Francisco Rodriguez Pardo
SPAIN
Exposición por la no-discriminación, la igualdad y la integración del colectivo LGBT,
los trabajadores sexuales y las personas viviendo con el VIH: “Desnudos frente al estigma”
Photo Exhibit
• Gabriela Gutiérrez Castro
Jornada Cubana contra la homofobia
Exhibit
•
CUBA
Hiker Chiu
TAIWAN
“1st Global Free Hugs with Intersex”: an action to reframing the name of “Yin-Yan Ren”
(“Yin-Yan Ren” means intersex people in Chinese)
Exhibit and Free Hugs action
• Hivos Foundation Victor and Georgina
Video Screening – July 08th at 13:00 hrs - Aula Profesor Botella
38
ECUADOR
NETHERLANDS
Jimena Luz Silva Segovia
Mapas corporales, estrategia metodológica para el estudio del cuerpo:
valor simbólico y discursos de género.
Exhibit
• Mohammad Rofiqul Islam
Hidden Identity: Unbuild
Photo Exhibit
• Ucu Agustin / Tunggal Pawestri
At Stake
Video Screening – July 08th at 13:00 hrs - Anfiteatro Ramón y Cajal
• Rubén Mora Mesquida
Deconstruyendo la pornografía gay a través de internet
Video Exhibit
• Teresa Lanza Monje
“Si quieres hazlo, pero hazlo bien”
Video Screening – July 07th at 13:00 hrs - Aula Profesor Botella
• Xara Sacchi
Vivir Afuera. (Cartón. Cadáver. Mamada)
Exhibit and Performance
• Zeljko Blace QueerSport - tension of sport normativity and queer expression
Exhibit
CHILE
BANGLADESH
INDONESIA
SPAIN
BOLIVIA
ARGENTINA/SPAIN
CROATIA
programme
•
39
INSTITUTIONAL EXHIBITIONS
July 07th and 08th
Institutional Exhibition Area
The institutional fair is an opportunity for various local and global organizations and institutions to
provide informational material and exhibit their publications and projects. In the same area we will
have a table for participants to distribute brochures and other materials from their own institutions.
A tourist information booth will also be present.
Institutions:
• Taylor and Francis Journals (http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/)
• Institute of Studies in Health, Sexuality and Human Development (IESSDEH)
(http://www.iessdeh.org/)
• Spanish LGBT Federation (FELGTB) (http://www.felgtb.org/en/)
• American Institute of Bisexuality, Inc (AIB) (http://www.bisexual.org/)
• Reproductive Health Matters (RHM) (http://www.rhmjournal.org.uk/)
SATELLITE MEETINGS
July 10th and 11th, 17:00 to 19:00 hrs
Place: Colegio Mayor “Marqués de la Ensenada”
Research, Advocacy, Action – a continuum - A workshop on sexual rights
advocacy strategies and action plan.
Jointly organized by IASSCS and Kartini Asia Network.
In the last decade, sexuality research has claimed a significant ground in the global south thus
gaining a deeper understanding of lived experiences of multiple sexual identities as well as the
silences, denial and oppression around issues of sexuality.
While there is a very thin and blurred line between researchers on sexuality and sexual rights
activists, the generation of new conceptualization and knowledge production has had a significant
impact on the activism of sexual rights activists. In many countries of the South (as well as the
North) states have in place very repressive legal and/ or extra legal (socio religious) mechanisms
against sexual minorities. The communities struggling for decriminalization of their identities have
evolved a range of very creative advocacy strategies within their national/regional realities.
The proposed workshop on advocacy for sexual rights and its relationship to research is an attempt
to create an interactive platform for researchers to share and learn from each other’s experiences.
For further information please contact:
Nursyahbani Katjasungkana and/or Abha Bhaiya
[email protected]
40
SPECIAL CULTURAL ACTIVITIES
Evening Interview with Professor John Gagnon
John Gagnon is an internationally renowned sexuality researcher, sexologist, sociologist and
Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Sociology at The State University at Stony Brook. He developed,
with William H. Simon, the concept of “sexual scripts” as presented and discussed in their landmark
publication, ‘Sexual Conduct’(1973), a prophetic analysis of sexual behavior and the experience of
that behavior as influenced by the subjective understanding of one’s sexuality.
John’s work has been influential worldwide, not only within the sociology discipline, but within
the larger arena of the scientific study of sexuality and sexual relationships, across disciplines and
area studies. This evening interview will be a unique opportunity to be present for an “armchair”
conversation with John about the evolution of his seminal work on sexuality and his insights
regarding the current status and future direction of the sexuality research field, concluding with
questions from the audience.
Interview conducted by Diane di Mauro and Gilbert Herdt
Date: Thursday 7 July at 21:00 hrs
Place: To be announced
Please confirm participation at the registration area on Thursday Morning.
Tour around the exhibition “INFORMATION IS LIFE”, from photographer Ayo Cabrera
The exhibition consists of a series of portraits of people living with HIV. These photographs
are display in various bars and entertainment venues of Madrid downtown, around Chueca
neighborhood.
Bilingual tour
Date: Thursday 7 July from 20:00 to 21:00 hrs
Departing point: Red Ribbon at Plaza Vásquez de Mella
Please confirm participation at the registration area on Thursday Morning.
Tapas’ Night
IASSCS Invites all conference participants to a cocktail party at the Real Jardín Botánico Alfonso
XIII de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
Friday 8 July from 21:00 to 24:00 hrs.
Avenida Complutense s/n de la Ciudad Universitaria de Madrid.
IASSCS POST-CONFERENCE TRAINING
Sunday July 10th to Wednesday July 20th
Colegio Mayor Marques de la Ensenada
(Contact: Inmaculada Hurtado)
programme
Date: Place: 41
Sessions by Theme:
42
ASPR
Academia and Sexual Power Relations in the House of Sciences.
Memory and Sexuality/ Women under Francoism; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
Gender Perspectives in Education; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Advanced Critical Sexuality Studies: A Training Program; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Methodological Interventions in Sexuality Education Research in Australia and
New Zealand; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
BH
Beyond Heterosexuality: LGBTQI Challenging and Reproducing Sexual Hegemonies.
(Re)producing Sexual Hegemonies: LGBTQI Experiences in Brazil; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
Bisexuals in the House of Sexual Diversity; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
Queer Youth; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Women Same-Sex Sexualities: Fighting Invisibilization and Heterosexism;
July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Researching Violence against Women-Loving and MTF Persons; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Rainbow Families; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Creating and Questioning Sexual Identities; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Homophobia: Challenges and Opportunities; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Institutional Approach to Sexual Diversity: Psychology, Law, Enterprises, Care;
July 9 13:45 – 15:30
Raising Awareness about Heteronormativity; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
DWRSI
Development Work and the Reproduction of Sexual Inequality.
Development Work Representations from a Country Perspective; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
GFSE
Gender, Feminism(s) and the Struggle for Sexual Equality.
Reviewing and Evaluating the Developments in the Field of Gender; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Women and Sexuality: Open Debates and Challenges; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Shaping and Reproducing Gendered Discourses; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Feminism and Rights; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Religion and Sexuality; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
The Pandemic of Sexual Violence: Domestic and Adolescents Violence; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
HIVSI
HIV/AIDS and Sexual Inequality.
Having Sex with HIV: Emerging Responses; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Responses to Sex Work Vulnerabilities; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Sexuality, Inequality and HIV: Challenges in a Globalized World; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
HIV and Gender; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Mobility, Vulnerability and HIV; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Confronting Sexual Exclusion: Remaining Gaps in the HIV Response; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
NNB
Non-normative Bodies as a Sexual Battleground.
Framing the Body through Policy and Technology; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
Age and Sexuality; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Sexuality and Disability in Southern Africa; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Exclusion, Sexuality and Power; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Embodying Gender; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Sexuality, Sexual Health and Disability; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
PDSI
Pleasure, Desire and Sexual (In)equality.
Redefining Pleasure and Sexuality; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
Sex, Sexualities and Subjectivity; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Research Investments on Sexual Rights in Latin America; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Masculinities and Public Policies; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Bodies: Pleasures and Vulnerabilities; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
ST
Sexual Tourism: Tensions between Development and Cultural Colonization
Globalization and Sexual Markets; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
SS
Sexualized States. From Sexual Repression to Sexual Democracies:
The Role of the Law, Public Policies, Education, Medicine and Religion.
Sexuality and Sexual Reproductive Rights; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
Trans Rights, Law and Citizenship; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
State-Sponsored Inequalities: The Politics of Sexuality in Contemporary China;
July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Medical Discourses on Gender and Sexuality; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Creating Lesbian and Gay Families: Marriage and Parenting; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Decriminalizing and Normalizing Policies; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Regional Dynamics in Sexuality and Politics: Common Threads and Differences;
July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Women and Gender Violence; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Collaborative Partnerships to Explore Diverse Sexualities in Australia and New Zealand:
Addressing Inequalities within Sexuality Education; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Sex Education in Schools; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Gaining Recognition through Social Movements; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Gendered Mobilities and Borders; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Feminism and Rights; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Using Human Rights to Examine the Effects of Law on Sexuality and Sexual Health;
July 9 11:45 – 13:15
LGBT Movement and State; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
Homophobia and its Practices; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
S 2.0
Sexuality 2.0: Internet, the Media and Online Social Networks Constructing
and Deconstructing Sexual Images, Relations and Practices.
Printed Media and Sexuality; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
The Internet is for Porn? Cyberspace and the New Uses of the Net; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Diversity in the Era of the New Media; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Sexual Markets, Pornography and Online Dating; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
Electronic Sociability, Gender, Sexuality and Internet Regulation; July 9 11:45 – 13:15
Power, Resistance and the New Media; July 9 13:45 – 15:30
Arts and SI
The Arts Performing, Reproducing and Questioning Sexual Inequalities.
The Sexualized Body and its Transgressions; July 7 15:00 – 16:30
Diversity, Power, Liberation; July 8 11:30 – 13:00
Gender and Visual Arts; July 8 15:00 – 16:30
RESASI
The races, ethnicities, social classes and ages of sexual (in)equality.
Overcoming Social and Cultural Practices; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
TI
Translating (in)equality: cultural globalization of both sexual discrimination
and sexual rights.
Erotic Mobility and Cultures of Response; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
Explaining Same-Sex Union Laws through Big Comparisons in Demographic and
Political Science; July 7 11:30 – 13:00
programme
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