DSN Bibliography

  • Abdulhadi, R. Alsultany, E. and Naber, N. (Eds.) (2011) Arab and Arab American Feminisms. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.

  • ActionAid et al. (2011) Statement of African social justice activists on the threats of the British government to ‘cut aid’ to African countries that violate LGBTI people in Africa. Available here: http://www.amsher.net/news/ViewArticle.aspx?id=1200

  • Agathangelou, A., Bassichis, M. D. and Spira, T. L. (2008) Intimate Investments: Homonormativity, Global Lockdown, and the Seductions of Empire. Radical History Review. 100. p.120-143.

  • Ahmed, M. (2008) A Threat to Queens Pride. Scholar and Feminist. 6(3). Available here: http://sfonline.barnard.edu/immigration/ahmed_01.htm

  • Ahmed, S. (2011) Problematic proximities: Or why critiques of gay imperialism matter. Feminist Legal Studies. 19 (2). p.119-132.

  • Aizura, A. Z. (2013) Trans Feminine Value, Racialized Others and the Limits of Necropolitics. In Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. & Posocco, S. (eds.). Queer Necropolitics. London: Routledge.

  • Aizura, A. Z. (2006) Of borders and homes: the imaginary community of (trans)sexual citizenship. Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. 7(2). p.1469-8447.

  • Aizura, A. Z. (2011) The Romance of the Amazing Scalpel: ‘Race’, Labor and Affect in Thai gender reassignment clinics. In Jackson, P. (ed.). Queer Bangkok: 21st Century Markets, Media, and Rights. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.

  • Aizura, A. Z. (2010) Feminine transformations: gender reassignment surgical tourism in Thailand. Medical Anthropology. 29(4). p.1-20.

  • Aken’Ova, D. et al. (2007) Public statement of warning. Monthly Review Zine. Available here: mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2007/increse310107.html

  • Allan, M. Queer Couplings: Formations of Religion and Sexuality in ‘Ala’ Al-Aswani’s ‘Imarat Ya’Qubyan. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.253-269.

  • Amireh, A. (2010) Afterword. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 16(4). p.635-647.

  • Al-Kassim, D. (2013) Psychoanalysis and The Postcolonial Genealogy of Queer Theory. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.343-346.

  • Al-Samman, H. and El-Ariss, T. (2013) Queer Affects: Introduction. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.205-209.

  • Amar, P. and El Shakry, O. (2013) Introduction: Curiosities of Middle East Studies in Queer Times. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.331-335.

  • Amo, V. and Parmar, P. (1984) Challenging imperial feminism. Feminist Review.17. p.3–19.

  • Asencio, M. (Ed.) (2010) Latina/o Sexualities: Probing Powers, Passions, Practices and Policies. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.

  • Asencio, M. (2011) “Locas,” respect, and masculinity: gender conformity in migrant Puerto Rican gay masculinities. Gender & Society 25(3). p.335-354.

  • Asencio, M. (2009) Migrant Puerto Rican lesbians negotiating gender, sexuality and ethno-nationality. National Women’s Studies Association Journal 21(3). p.1-23.

  • Asencio, M. and Acosta, K. (2009) Migration, gender conformity, and social mobility among Puerto Rican sexual minorities. Sexuality Research and Social Policy 6(3). p.34-43.

  • Bacchetta, P. and Fantone, L. (2013) Trans-Q Fem: Elements for a Queer Transnational Feminist Critique. Rome: Ediesse.

  • Bacchetta, P. and Haritaworn, J. (2011) There are Many Transatlantics: Homonationalism, Homotrans­nationalism and Feminist-Queer-Trans of Color Theories and Practices. In Davis, K. & Evans, M. (eds.). Transatlantic Conversations: Feminism as Traveling Theory. Aldershot: Ashgate.

  • Bacchetta, P. Campt, T. Grewal, I. Kaplan, C. Moallem, M. and Terry, J. (2002) Transnational feminist practices against war. Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism 2(2). p.302–308.

  • Bacchetta, P. (2010) The (failed) production of Hindu nationalized space in Ahmedabad, Gujarat. Gender, Place and Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography 17(5). p.551-572.

  • Bacchetta, P. (2010) Decolonial praxis: Enabling intranational and transnational queer coalition building. Paola Bacchetta Interviewed by Marcelle Maese-Cohen. Qui Parle : Critical Humanities and Social Science 18(2). p.147-192.

  • Bacchetta P. A., Marshall, R. and Ticktin, M. (2008) Transnational Conversation on French Colonialism, Immigration, Violence and Sovereignty. Scholar and Feminist. 6(3). Available here: http://sfonline.barnard.edu/immigration/conversation_01.htm

  • Bacchetta, P. (2002) Re-scaling trans/national ‘Queerdom’: 1980s lesbian and “lesbian” identitary positionalities in Delhi. Antipode: A Radical Journey of Geography. 34(5). p.947-973.

  • Bacchetta, P. (1999) When the (Hindu) nation exiles its queers. Social Text. 61(4). p.141-166.

  • Bacchetta, P. (1993) Muslim women in the RSS discourse: Eroticizing relations of domination/ subordination. Feminist Journal of Association for Asian Studies 8 (3-4). p.14-20.

  • Bacchetta, P. (2009) Transnational Borderlands: Gloria Anzaldúa’s Epistemologies of Resistance and Lesbians “of Color” in France. In Cantu, N. & Gutierrez, C. L. (eds.). Prietas y Gueras: Celebrating Twenty Years of Borderlands/La Frontera. San Antonio: Adelante.

  • Bacchetta, P. (2013) Queer Formations in (Hindu) Nationalism. In Srivasta, S. (ed.). Sexuality Studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  • Bahoora, H. (2013) Baudelaire in baghdad: Modernism, the Body. and Husayn Mardan’s Poetics of the Self. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.313-329.

  • Bakshi, S. (2004) A Comparative Analysis of Hijras and Drag Queens: The Subversive Possibilities and Limits of Parading Effeminacy and Negotiating Masculinity. In Schacht, S. P. & Underwood, L. (eds.). The Drag Queen Anthology: The Absolutely Fabulous but Flawlessly Customary World of Female Impersonators. Philadelphia:The Haworth Press.

  • Bakshi, S. (2012) Fractured resistance: Queer negotiations of the postcolonial in R. Raj Rao’s The Boyfriend. South Asian Review. 33(2).

  • Bakshi, S. Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. and Petzen, J. (2012) Globalizing Sexualities. In George Ritzer (ed.). Encyclopedia of Globalization. Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell.

  • Bala, Sruti. (2005) I like women like me!. Available here: http://www.Countercurrents.org.

  • Baron, M. R. (2013). (Hyper/In)Visibility and the military corps(e). In Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. & Posocco, S. (eds.). Queer Necropolitics. London: Routledge.

  • Barskanmaz, C. (2008) Rassismus, Postkolonialismus und Recht – Zu einer deutschen Critical Race Theory? (Racism, Postcolonialism, and Law – Towards a German Critical Race Theory?). Kritische Justiz 3. p.296-302.

  • Bassichis, M. and Spade, D. (2013) Queer Politics and Anti-Blackness. In Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. & Posocco, S. (eds.). Queer Necropolitics. London: Routledge.

  • Bent Bars (2011) Why Bent Bars Won’t be Marching at the East End Gay Pride. Communities of Resistance. Available here: www.co-re.org/joomla/index.php/next-meeting/95-bent-bars-news

  • Bhattacharyya, G. (2008) Dangerous Brown Men: Exploiting Sex, Violence and Feminism in the War on Terror. London: Zed Books.

  • Bhavnani, K-K. and Coulson, M. (1986) Transforming socialist-feminism: The challenge of racism. Feminist Review. 23. p.81–92.

  • Bilge, S. (2013) Reading the racial subtext of the Québécois accommodation controversy: An analytics of racialized governmentality. Politikon: South African Journal of Political Studies. 40(1). p.157-181.

  • Bilge, S. (2012) Mapping Québécois sexual nationalism in times of ‘crisis of reasonable accommodations’. Journal of Intercultural Studies 33(3). p.308-318.

  • Bilge, S. and Scheibelhofer, P. (2012) Unravelling the new politics of racialised sexualities: Introductio. Journal of Intercultural Studies 33(3). p.255-259.

  • Bilge, S. (2012) Developing intersectional solidarities: A plea for queer intersectionality. In Smith, M. S. & Jaffar, F. (eds.). Beyond the Queer Alphabet: Conversations on Gender, Sexuality and Intersectionality. Teaching Equity Matters E-Book Series

  • Bilge, S. and Denis, A. (2010) Introduction: Women, Intersectionality and Diasporas. Journal of Intercultural Studies. 31(1). p.1-8.

  • Bilge, S. (2010) Beyond subordination vs. resistance: an intersectional approach to the agency of veiled Muslim women. Journal of Intercultural Studies 31(1). p.9-28.

  • Bracke, S. (2012) From ‘saving women’ to ‘saving gays’: rescue narratives and their dis/continuities. European Journal of Women’s Studies 19(1). p.237-252.

  • Brady, M. P. (2008) The Homoerotics of Immigration Control. Scholar and Feminist. 6(3). Available here: http://sfonline.barnard.edu/immigration/brady_01.htm

  • Canaday, M. (2009) The Straight State: Sexuality and Citizenship in Twentieth-Century America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

  • Chávez, K. (2013) Queer Migration Politics: Activist Rhetoric and Coalitional Possibilities. Urbana: University of Illinois Press

  • Chávez, K. (2012) Doing Intersectionality: Power, Privilege and Identity in Political Activist Communities. In Bardhan, N. & Orbe, M. P. (eds.). Identity Research and Intercultural Communication: Reflections and Future Directions. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.

  • Chávez, K. (2011) Identifying the needs of LGBTQ immigrants and refugees in southern Arizona. Journal of Homosexuality 58(2). p.89-218.

  • Chávez, K. (2010) Border (in)Ssecurities: Normative and differential belonging in LGBTQ and immigrant rights discourse. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies 7(2). p.136-155.

  • Chávez, K. (2010) Poetic polemics: A (queer feminist of color) reflection on a gay slam poet. Text and Performance Quarterly 30(4). p.444-452.

  • Crenshaw, K. W. (1994) Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color. In Albertson, F. M. & Mykitiuk, R. (eds.). The Public Nature of Private Violence. New York: Routledge.

  • Cruz-Malave, A. and Manalansan, M.F. IV. (Eds.) (2002) Queer Globalisation: Citizenship and the Afterlife of Colonialism. New York and London: New York University Press.

  • Decolonize Queer. (2011) From Gay Pride to White Pride? Why Marching on East London is Racist. Available here: www.decolonizequeer.org/?p=1

  • Douglas, S. Jivraj, S. and Lamble, S. (2011) liabilities of queer anti-racist critique. Feminist Legal Studies 19(2). p.107-118.

  • Edelman, E. A. (2013) ‘Walking While Transgendered’: Necropolitical Regulations of Trans Feminine Bodies of Color in the US Nation’s Capital. In Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. & Posocco, S. (eds.). Queer Necropolitics. London: Routledge.

  • Ekine, S. and Abbas, H. (Eds.) (2013) Queer African Reader. Pambazuka Press.

  • Ekine, S. (2012). Anti-gay rights crusade in Africa a distraction. Pambazuka News. Available here: http://pambazuka.org/en/category/features/80243

  • Ekine, S. (2011) The politics of phobias. New Internationalist. Available here: http://newint.org/blog/majority/2011/03/17/politics-of-phobias/

  • El-Ariss, T. (2013) Majnun Strikes Back: Crossings of Madness and Homosexuality in Contemporary Arabic Literature. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.293-312.

  • El-Tayeb, F. (2003) Begrenzte Horizonte: Queer identity und Festung Europa. In: Steyerl, H. & Gutiérrez Rodríguez, E. (eds.). Spricht die Subalterne deutsch? Migration und postkoloniale Kritik. Muenster: Unrast.

  • El-Tayeb, F. (2012) Gays who cannot properly be gay: Queer Muslims in the neoliberal European city. European Journal of Women’s Studies. 19(1). p.79-95.

  • El-Tayeb, F. (2011) European Others: Queering Ethnicity in Postnational Europe. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2011.

  • El-Tayeb, F. (2008) The birth of a European public: Migration, postnationality, and race in the uniting of Europe. American Quarterly 60(3). p.865-96.

  • El-Tayeb, F. (2004) Limited Horizons: Queer Identity in Fortress Europe. In Gutiérrez Rodríguez, E. & Steyerl, H. (eds.). Can the Subaltern speak German? Migration and Postcolonial Criticism. Muenster: Unrast Verlag.

  • El-Tayeb, F. (1999) ’Blood Is a Very Special Juice’: Racialized bodies and citizenship in 20th century Germany. International Review of Social History 44(S7). p.149-169.

  • Epps, B. Johnson-González, B. and Valens, K. (Eds.) (2005) Passing Lines: Immigration and Sexuality. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

  • Erdem, E. Haritaworn, J. and Tauqir, T. (2008) Gay Imperialism: The Role of Gender and Sexuality Discourses in the ‘War on Terror. In Kuntsman, A. & Miyake, E. (eds.). Out of Place: Silences in Queerness/Raciality. York: Raw Nerve Books.

  • Erdem, E. Haritaworn, J. and Petzen, J. (2005) The Politics of Migrant Women’s Rights: Anti-racist Feminists Discuss Domestic Violence, Feminism and Multiculturalism Next Genderation Network. Available here: http://www.nextgenderation.net/writings.html

  • Erdem, E. Haritaworn, J. Petzen, J. and Tauqir, T. (2007) Internationalism or Imperialism? Feminist and Gay and Lesbian Voices in the War against Terror [German], Frauensolidarität. 100. p. 8-9

  • Erel, U. Haritaworn, J. Gutiérrez Rodríguez, E. and Klesse, C. (2008) Intersectionality or Simultaneity?! Conceptualising Multiple Oppressions. In Kuntsman, A. & Miyake, E. (eds.). Out of Place: Silences in Queerness/Raciality. York: Raw Nerve Books.

  • Fekete, L. (2006) Enlightened fundamentalism? Immigration, feminism and the right. Race and Class 48(2). p.1–22.

  • Ferguson, R. (2003) Aberrations in Black: Toward a Queer of Color Critique. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

  • Georgis, D. (2013) Thinking Past Pride: Queer Arab Shame in Bareed Mista3jil. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.233-251.

  • Gossett, C. (2013) We Will not Rest in Peace: AIDS Activism, Black Radicalism, Queer and/or Trans Resistance. In Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. & Posocco, S. (eds.). Queer Necropolitics. London: Routledge.

  • Gunkel, H. and Pitcher, B. (2008) Editorial: racism in the closet – interrogating postcolonial sexuality. Dark Matter 3. Available here: http://www.darkmatter101.org

  • Hadeed, K. (2013) Homosexuality and Epistemic Closure in Modern Arabic Literature. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.271-291.

  • Hannabach, Cathy. (2013) Technologies of Blood: Asylum, Medicine, and Biopolitics. Cultural Politics. 9(1)

  • Haritaworn, J. (2008) Loyal repetitions of the nation: Gay assimilation and the ‘war on terror’. Dark Matter 3. Available here: http://www.darkmatter101.org

  • Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. and Posocco, S. (2013) Introduction: Queer Necropolitics. In Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. & Posocco, S. (eds.). Queer Necropolitics. London: Routledge.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2009) “Caucasian and Thai make a good mix”: Gender, ambivalence and the “mixed-race” body. European Journal of Cultural Studies 12(1). p.59-78.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2009) Hybrid border crossers? Towards a radical socialisation of “Mixed Race”. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 35(1). p.59-78.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2007) ‘Beautiful beasts: Ambivalence and distinction in the gender identity negotiations of multiracialised women of Thai descent. Women’s Studies International Forum 30(5). p.391-403.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2007/2009), ‘Queer Mixed Race? Interrogating Homonormativity through Thai Interraciality,’ in G. Brown, K. Browne and J. Lim (eds.), Geographies of Sexualities: Theory, Practices and Politics, Aldershot: Ashgate, p. 101-112.

  • Haritaworn, J. Petzen, J. (2011) Invented Traditions, New Intimate Publics: Tracing the German “Muslim Homophobia” Discourse. In Flood, C. Hutchings, S. Miazhevich, G. & Nickels, H. (eds.). Islam in its International Context: Comparative Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Press.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2010) Wounded Subjects: Sexual Exceptionalism and the Moral Panic on “Migrant Homophobia” In Germany. In Boatca, M. Costa, S. & Gutiérrez Rodríguez, E. (eds.). Decolonising European Sociology. Aldershot: Ashgate.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2011) Colorful bodies in the Multikulti Metropolis: Trans Vitality, Victimology and the Berlin Hate Crime Debate. In Cotton, T. (ed.). Trans Migrations: Bodies, Borders, and the (Geo)politics of Gender Trans-ing. New York: Routledge.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2011) Queer injuries: The cultural politics of “hate crimes” in Germany. Social Justice 37(1). p.69-91.

  • Haritaworn, J. (2012) Women’s rights, gay rights and anti-Muslim racism in Europe. European Journal of Women’s Studies. 19(1/2). p.73-78.

  • Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. and Petzen, J. (2010) Sexualising the “War on Terror”: Queerness, Islamophobia and globalised Orientalism. In Sayyid, S. & Abdoolkarim, V. (eds.). Thinking through Islamophobia: Global Perspectives. London: Hurst/New York: Columbia Press.

  • Helem: Lebanese Protection for LGBTIQ. http://helem.net/

  • Helie, A. and Hoodfar, H. (Eds.) (2012) Sexuality in Muslim Contexts: Restrictions and Resistance. London: Zed Books.

  • Helie, A. (2012) Introduction: Politicizing Sexuality –Sexualizing Resistance? In Helie, A. and Hoodfar, H. (eds.). Sexuality in Muslim Contexts: Restrictions and Resistance. London: Zed Books.

  • Helie, A. (2012) Risky Rights? Asserting Sexual Diversity in Muslim Contexts. In Helie, A. and Hoodfar, H. (eds.). Sexuality in Muslim Contexts: Restrictions and Resistance. London: Zed Books.

  • Helie, A. (2011) The Politics of Abortion Policy in the Heterogeneous Islamic World. In Raghavan, C. & Levine, J. (eds.). Women’s Rights in the Changing Islamic World. Waltham MA: Brandeis University Press.

  • Helie, A. (2008) Communities and Control of Sexuality: Organizing Against “Honor” Crimes in Muslim Contexts. In Fabeni, S. & Fried, S. T. (eds.). Demanding Credibility and Sustaining Activism: A Guide to Sexuality – Based Advocacy. Washington DC: Global Rights – Partners for Justice.

  • Helie, A. (2007) “Muslim Women” and Feminist Strategies in Times of Religious Fundamentalisms. In Dubel, I. & Vintges, K. (eds.). Women, Feminism & Fundamentalism. Amsterdam: Humanistics University Press.

  • Helie, A. (2006) Threats and Survival: The Religious Right and LGBT Strategies in Muslim Contexts. Women in Action – Queering: Social Movements and Feminist Theories Vol. 1. Manila:ISIS International.

  • Helie, A. (2004) Politico-Religious Forces and the Gay and Lesbian Movements in Muslim Countries and Communities. Reproductive Health Matters : Sexuality, Rights and Social Justice. 12(23). p.120 – 124.

  • Helie, Anissa (2001) The Religious Right in Muslim Countries and Communities: Backlash Against Gays and Lesbians “Increasing Visibility”. Islam en Homoseksualitetit. Utrecht Yoesuf Foundation.

  • Hochberg, G. Z. Maikey, H. Rima. and Saraya, S. (2010) No pride in occupation: A roundtable discussion. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 16(4). p. 599-610.

  • Hochberg, G. Z. “Check me out”: Queer encounters in Sharif Waked’s Chic Point: Fashion for Israeli Checkpoints. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 16(4). p. 577-597.

  • Hussain, Hadi (2010) A Gay of No Importance. Chay Magazine. Available here: http://www.chaymagazine.org/2010-queer-jun/246-hadi-gay-no-importance

  • Hussain, Hadi (2009) A Cry in the Wilderness: Male Homosexuality in Pakistan. Chay Magazine. Available here: http://www.chaymagazine.org/homosexuality/118-a-cry-in-the-wilderness-male-homosexuality-in-pakistan

  • Incite! (2006) Color of Violence: The Incite! Anthology. Cambridge, MA: South End Press.

  • Jacob, W. C. (2013) The Middle East: Global, Postcolonial, Regional, and Queer. International Journal of Middle East Studies. 45(2). p.347-349.

  • Jivraj, S. (2013) Interrogating Law’s Religion. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

  • Jivraj, S. and De Jong, A. (2011) The Dutch homo-emancipation policy and its silencing effects on queer Muslims. Feminist Legal Studies 19(2). p.143–158.

  • Kariapper, A. S. (2008) Walking a Tightrope: Women and Veiling in the United Kingdom. London: WLUML.

  • Keenan, S. (2011) Safe Spaces for Dykes in Danger? Refugee Law’s Production of the Vulnerable Lesbian Subject. In FitzGerald, S. (ed.). Regulating the International Movement of Women: From Protection to Control. London: Routledge.

  • Keskinen, S. (2012) Limits to speech? The racialised politics of gendered violence in Denmark and Finland. Journal of Intercultural Studies 33(3). p.261-274.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2009) Figurations of Violence and Belonging: Queerness, Migranthood and Nationalism in Cyberspace and Beyond. Oxford: Peter Lang.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2009) The Currency of Victimhood in Uncanny Homes: Russian-speaking Queer Immigrants in Israel Confront Homophobia. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 35 (1). p.133-149.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2008) The soldier and the terrorist: Sexy nationalism, queer violence. Sexualities. 11(1). p.159-187.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2008) Between Gulags and Pride Parades: Sexuality, Nation and Haunted Speech Acts. GLQ: Journal of Gay and Lesbian Studies. 14(2-3). p.263-287.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2008) Written in Blood: Contested Borders and the Politics of Passing in Israel/Palestine and in Cyberspace. Feminist Media Studies. 8(3). p.267-283.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2008) Genealogies of Hate, Metonymies of Violence: Immigration, Homophobia, Homopatriotism. In Miyake. E. & Kuntsman, A. (eds.). Out Of Place: Interrogating Silences in Queerness/Raciality. York: Raw Nerve Books.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2008) ‘Shadows of the Past: Memoirs of the Gulags and Contemporary Homophobia’, Kultura.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2008) Queerness as Europeanness: Immigration, Orientalist Visions and Racialised Encounters in Israel/Palestine. Dark Matter 3. Available here: http://www.darkmatter101.org/site/2008/05/02/queerness-as-europeanness-immigration-orientialist-visions-and-racialized-encounters-in-israelpalestine/

  • Kuntsman, A. (2007) Hospitality in flames: queer immigrants and melancholic be/longing. In Molz, J. G. & Gibson, S. (eds.). Mobilizing Hospitality: The Ethics of Social Relations in a Mobile World. Aldershot: Ashgate.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2007) Belonging through violence: Flaming, erasure and performativity in queer migrant community. In O’Riordan, K. & Phillips, D. J. (eds.). Queers Online: Media technology and sexuality, New York: Peter Lang.

  • Kuntsman, A. (2003) Double homecoming: Sexuality, ethnicity and place in immigration stories of Russian lesbians in Israel. Women’s Studies International Forum. 26 (4). p.299-311.

  • Lamble, S. (2013) Queer Investments in Punitiveness: Sexual Citizenship, Social Movements and the Expanding Carceral State. In Haritaworn, J. Kuntsman, A. & Posocco, S. (eds.). Queer Necropolitics. London: Routledge.

  • Lamble, S. (2008) Retelling Racialized Violence, Remaking White Innocence: The Politics of Interlocking Oppressions in Transgender Day of Remembrance. Sexuality Research & Social Policy. 5(1). p.24-42.

  • Lenon, S. (2012) Hidden Hegemonies of the Rainbow: The racialised scaffolding of forced marriage and civil partnerships in the UK. Journal of Intercultural Studies. 33(3). p.275-287.

  • Lentin, A. (2011) What Happens to Anti-Racism When We Are PostRace? Feminist Legal Studies. 19(2). p.159-168.

  • Le Roux, G. (2012) Proudly African and Transgender. Women: A Cultural Review. 23(1). p.79-95.

  • Luibhéid, E. (2002) Entry Denied: Controlling Sexuality at the Border. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

  • Luibhéid, E, Cantú, Jr., L. (eds.) (2005) Queer Migration: Sexuality, U.S. Citizenship, and Border Crossings. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

  • Maikey, H. and Schotton, H. (2012) Queers Resisting Zionism: On Authority and Accountability Beyond Homonationalism. Jadaliyya. Available here: http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/7738/queers-resisting-zionism_on-authority-and-accounta

  • Maikey, H. (2012) Signposts from Al Qaws: A Decade of Building a Queer Palestinian Discourse. Bekhsoos: a feminist and queer arab magazine. Available here: http://www.bekhsoos.com/web/2012/05/alqaws/

  • Maikey, H. (2012) The History and Contemporary State of Palestinian Sexual Liberation Struggle. In Lim, A. (ed.). The Case for Sanctions Against Israel. London: Verso.

  • Maikey H. (2008), Rainbow Over Palestine. The Guardian. Available here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/mar/10/rainbowoverpalestine

  • Maikey, H. and Ritchie, J. (2009) Israel, Palestine, and Queers. Monthly Review Zine. Available here: http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2009/mr280409.html

  • Maikey, H. interviewed by de Jong, A. (2011) Available here: http://www.usacbi.org/2011/07/haneen-maikey-on-resisting-homophobia-and-occupation/

  • Makarem, G. (2006). Gay Rights: Who are the real enemies of liberation? Socialist Review. Available here: http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/article.php?articlenumber=9662

  • Makarem, G. (2009) We Are Not Agents of the West: Ghassan Makarem replies to Joseph Massad. Available here: http://www.resetdoc.org/story/00000001542

  • Makarem, G. (2009) LGBTIQ rights and the movement for change in Lebanon. Available here: http://www.4edu.info/index.php/Ghassan_Makarem,_%27LGBTIQ_rights_and_the_movement_for_change_in_Lebanon%27

  • Makarem, G. (2011) The Story of HELEM. Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies. 7(3). p.98-112.

  • Makarem, G. (2011) Interview: The LGBT Struggle in Lebanon. Socialist Worker. Available here: http://socialistworker.org/2011/02/02/lgbt-struggle-in-lebanon

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  • For Tellis see also: http://blogs.thehindu.com/delhi/?p=25797
    http://newindianexpress.com/magazine/voices/article158608.ece
    http://newindianexpress.com/magazine/article104406.ece
    http://newindianexpress.com/magazine/voices/article434945.ece
    http://newindianexpress.com/magazine/voices/article130140.ece
    http://newindianexpress.com/magazine/article15058.ece
    http://newindianexpress.com/magazine/article255350.ece
    http://cafedissensus.com/2013/06/25/on-being-a-gay-activist-in-india-ashley-tellis/
    http://www.ibtimes.com/israels-hypocrisy-pinkwashing-why-lgbt-movement-not-just-about-gay-rights-214104#
    http://schoolofeducators.com/2010/02/volume-3-month-2-day-26-an-interview-with-dr-ashley-tellis/
    http://www.india-seminar.com/2003/524/524%20ashley%20tellis.htm
    http://www.sify.com/news/aids-in-india-isn-t-just-about-gays-mr-azad-news-columns-lhgti9afbbb.html
    http://www.sify.com/news/wanted-a-new-feminist-movement-in-india-news-columns-mm5lMlgcabf.html