Publications

Human Rights Activism, Sexuality, and Gender

Year of Publication: 2021
Month of Publication: 2
Author(s): Lynette J Chua
Research Area(s): Human Rights
Book Title: The Oxford Handbook of Law and Anthropology
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Abstract: This chapter introduces an anthropological inquiry into human rights activism, sexuality, and gender, and proposes taking an ethnographic approach grounded in love, agency, and humanity to do so. Such an inquiry brings together queer anthropology and the anthropology of human rights to analyse the intersection of human rights and social justice activism for people with non-normative sexualities and genders. Although queer anthropology has illuminated the contingent and multiple ways of doing sexuality and gender, it usually does not examine the processes and patterns that arise out of human rights or the actions and experiences of activists. On the other hand, anthropologists of human rights have generally not focused on non-normative genders or sexualities. The proposed ethnographic approach does not merely pay attention to the interpretation, adaptation, and circulation of the substantive meanings of human rights and such affiliated identities as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT); it also analyses the emotions and interpersonal relations that give rise to and emerge from those processes and treats them as inherent to the practices of human rights and LGBT identities. Additionally, this approach is motivated by compassion for the agency and empirical realities of their research subjects. Taking this approach to develop research at the intersection of human rights activism, sexuality, and gender, the field of anthropology can further influence theories of social movements and collective action in the broader social sciences.