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Troubling genderS and consumer well‐being: Going across, between and beyond the binaries to gender/sex/ual and intersectional diversity

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Troubling genderS and consumer well‐being: Going across, between and beyond the binaries to gender/sex/ual and intersectional diversity. / Steinfield, Laurel; Hutton, Martina; Cheded, Mohammed.
In: Journal of Consumer Affairs, Vol. 58, No. 1, 20.04.2024, p. 3-53.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineEditorialpeer-review

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Steinfield L, Hutton M, Cheded M. Troubling genderS and consumer well‐being: Going across, between and beyond the binaries to gender/sex/ual and intersectional diversity. Journal of Consumer Affairs. 2024 Apr 20;58(1):3-53. doi: 10.1111/joca.12573

Author

Steinfield, Laurel ; Hutton, Martina ; Cheded, Mohammed. / Troubling genderS and consumer well‐being : Going across, between and beyond the binaries to gender/sex/ual and intersectional diversity. In: Journal of Consumer Affairs. 2024 ; Vol. 58, No. 1. pp. 3-53.

Bibtex

@article{1b0f4741906c4f4481468593cc90d5ca,
title = "Troubling genderS and consumer well‐being: Going across, between and beyond the binaries to gender/sex/ual and intersectional diversity",
abstract = "In this editorial we outline why a call for more inclusive, conscientious approaches to studying gender/sex/ual diversity and intersectional identities is needed, and how the articles in this special issue answered this call. We summarize key takeaways from a review of the literature, noting significant under‐representation of gender/sex/ual diversity and intersectional social locations. We also explore the history of the gender/sex binaries (e.g., female/male; women/men; femininity/masculinity) to help illuminate the premises upon which the popular trend of studying gender/sex differences between men and women and the invisibilities of gender/sex/ual diverse people exist. We conclude with guidance on how scholars and practitioners might engage in thinking, doing, and connecting to move the conversation forward.",
keywords = "transgender, sex, institutional activism, intersectionality, Gender, sexuality",
author = "Laurel Steinfield and Martina Hutton and Mohammed Cheded",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1111/joca.12573",
language = "English",
volume = "58",
pages = "3--53",
journal = "Journal of Consumer Affairs",
issn = "0022-0078",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Troubling genderS and consumer well‐being

T2 - Going across, between and beyond the binaries to gender/sex/ual and intersectional diversity

AU - Steinfield, Laurel

AU - Hutton, Martina

AU - Cheded, Mohammed

PY - 2024/4/20

Y1 - 2024/4/20

N2 - In this editorial we outline why a call for more inclusive, conscientious approaches to studying gender/sex/ual diversity and intersectional identities is needed, and how the articles in this special issue answered this call. We summarize key takeaways from a review of the literature, noting significant under‐representation of gender/sex/ual diversity and intersectional social locations. We also explore the history of the gender/sex binaries (e.g., female/male; women/men; femininity/masculinity) to help illuminate the premises upon which the popular trend of studying gender/sex differences between men and women and the invisibilities of gender/sex/ual diverse people exist. We conclude with guidance on how scholars and practitioners might engage in thinking, doing, and connecting to move the conversation forward.

AB - In this editorial we outline why a call for more inclusive, conscientious approaches to studying gender/sex/ual diversity and intersectional identities is needed, and how the articles in this special issue answered this call. We summarize key takeaways from a review of the literature, noting significant under‐representation of gender/sex/ual diversity and intersectional social locations. We also explore the history of the gender/sex binaries (e.g., female/male; women/men; femininity/masculinity) to help illuminate the premises upon which the popular trend of studying gender/sex differences between men and women and the invisibilities of gender/sex/ual diverse people exist. We conclude with guidance on how scholars and practitioners might engage in thinking, doing, and connecting to move the conversation forward.

KW - transgender

KW - sex

KW - institutional activism

KW - intersectionality

KW - Gender

KW - sexuality

U2 - 10.1111/joca.12573

DO - 10.1111/joca.12573

M3 - Editorial

VL - 58

SP - 3

EP - 53

JO - Journal of Consumer Affairs

JF - Journal of Consumer Affairs

SN - 0022-0078

IS - 1

ER -