Full Description
Emotions are central to the pursuit, organisation, and contestation of LGBT rights in law. The Emotions of LGBT Rights and Reforms: Repairing Law analyses emotions that shape conflicts of rights that emerge between different minoritised groups across law reforms directed at better supporting LGBT people.
This book examines law reform debates about religious exceptions to anti-discrimination laws, legal recognition of trans people, bans on conversion therapy, and sex and LGBT education in schools from jurisdictions like the United Kingdom, Australia, and the United States. Drawing from socio-legal theories, this book develops the concept of emotional grammar to show how emotions structure law reform pursuits (by threading Hansard, legislation, case law, law reform consultations, statutory guidance) and explains why addressing this emotional grammar is important for scholars, lawyers, judges, legislators, and activists seeking to navigate conflicts over LGBT rights and reforms that aim to repair the inequalities faced by LGBT people.
Contents
Acknowledgments
1. Reparative Conflicts: Desiring Rights and Feeling Reforms
2. Reckoning Resentments: Sexuality, Religion, and Conflicts in Equality Laws
3. Addressing Anxieties: Debates of Legal (Trans) Gender Recognition
4. Sensing Shame, Healing Pain: Tensions in Banning LGBT Conversion Practices
5. Confronting Concerns: Contests over Sex and LGBT Education in Schools
6. Affecting Repair: Futures and Forms of LGBT Rights
Bibliography
Index



