Beyond ‘Voice’ to ‘Learning with’: A Multiple Streams Policy Analysis and Qualitative Exploration Problematizing Representations of Young LGBT+ Identities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Orientations and Identities
1.2. The LGBTI+ National Youth Strategy
1.3. Rationale
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Reflexivity
2.2. Aims and Objectives
2.3. Access, Recruitment, and Sampling
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Management and Analysis
2.6. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Applying the Multiple Streams Approach to the Initiation of the LGBTI+ National Youth Strategy
3.1.1. Problem Stream
3.1.2. Policy Stream
3.1.3. Political Stream
3.2. Interrupting the Potential for Unintended Negative Consequences
3.3. The YuPP☺ Project
3.3.1. Participants
3.3.2. Reflections on the Dominant Discourse in Relation to LGBT+ Youth Identities
3.3.3. Representations of Orientations and Identities
3.3.4. Silence and (in)Visiblity within Education
4. Discussion
4.1. Interpersonal Recognition
4.2. Recognition of LGBT+ Human Rights
4.3. Community Recognition
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Stage | Number of People | Number of Contacts |
---|---|---|
Access | ||
Informal discussion | 2 youth stakeholders |
|
2 adult stakeholders |
| |
Formal contact | 2 youth stakeholders |
|
7 adult stakeholders |
| |
Recruitment | ||
Informed of project | 12 YAG members |
|
Invitation to attend Information Sessions | 2 youth stakeholders |
|
9 YAG members |
| |
Information Session | 9 YAG members accepted invitation |
|
Forwarded Recording of Information Session | 1 youth stakeholder |
|
4 adult stakeholders |
| |
Expressions of Interest | 9 YAG members expressed interest 2 YAG members unavailable 1 YAG member could not be contacted |
|
Sampling | ||
Follow up after cooling-off period | 8 YAG members expressed interest 1 YAG member declined 1 YAG member did not respond |
|
Consent to be part of WhatsApp Group | 8 YAG members |
|
Invitation to attend Update Zoom presentation | 8 YAG members |
|
Update Zoom presentation | 8 YAG members |
|
Forwarded Recording of Information Session | 2 YAG members |
|
Consent to be part of the YuPP☺ Project | 7 YAG members |
|
Attended consultations | 6 YAG members |
|
Characteristic | Number of Participants |
---|---|
Sexual orientation | lesbian (n = 3) gay (n = 3) queer (n = 1) pansexual (n = 1) * |
Gender | female (n = 3); male (n = 3) |
Gender identity | transgender (n = 1); cisgender (n = 5) |
Pronouns | she/her (n = 3); he/him (n = 3); they/them (n = 1) * |
Age on recruitment onto the Youth Advisory Group | 17 years (n = 3); 19 years (n = 3); 20 years (n = 1) |
How recruited onto Youth Advisory Group | LGBT+ national youth service (n = 3); rural youth service (n = 2); urban youth service (n = 2); peer mentor (n = 2) media panel (n = 1); work placement (n = 1); * |
Age on recruitment onto the YuPP☺ Project | 21 years (n = 3); 23 years (n = 2); 24 years (n = 1) |
Representation of Young LGBT+ Identities | Quotations |
---|---|
Dominant discourse | “There has been a lot of pathologizing of LGBT+ young people”. “The assumption that young people are not fully formed, are adults in the making, and can’t make decisions. Then added to this, being LGBT+ is a phase”. “So, maybe just a bit of a hang-up that LGBT+ people are not right in the head”. “They would prefer if there was a box that said normal.” |
Concerns conveyed in the discourse | “Back in the day, if you were LGBT+, you could be sent to the madhouse or to an asylum. I’m not sure that people still think this sort of way, maybe subliminally they do”. “And you have to take into consideration that maybe there would be fear: ‘What if I say something wrong, they might call my parents because they were worried about me’”. “I think it comes from years of hearing about LGBT+ people being kicked out or home and all this kind of stuff. That’s always in the back of your mind. And it’s like: ‘Oh well, this happened to that person, so my parents could do that to me’, or ‘This could happen to me when I’m out on the street’”. “Yeah, all these kinds of micro aggressions and macro aggressions”. “School might the worst thing, or their friends are bullying them. They might constantly feel suicidal”. |
Potential impact of the discourse | “I feel that LGBT+ people have a baseline level of heightened risk of psychological distress. I suppose they’re predisposed to it because of the baseline almost”. “It’sreally setting them up for a fall from a very young age, like, how they perceive themselves”. “I meet people all the time that are like ‘well, I’m gay but I’m not part of the whole Pride Festival, the whole LGBT+ community’“. “A huge proportion of the community in Ireland never want to be counted–because of the fear of being outed, or the stigma that’s implied”. |
Tensions within the discourse | “There’s a huge impact with that–you see it with mental health [pause]. Not that mental health and sexuality are connected. I’m not trying to say that, to be clear”. “If you’re LGBT+, you’re not just LGBT+. There’s other issues, rather than just the identity part. Young people are in school, or this is going on at home, or this is happening. They’re not like: ‘I just live my life being gay and everything is great at this moment in time’. Maybe being LGBT+ is the best thing in their lives”. “It’s certainly true that we don’t live single issue lives”. “Even if you have a great home life and get on great with your parents or guardians, there’s still this thing that’s looming over your head”. “If we were to say x% of LGBT+ young people have felt suicidal in the last six months. Then LGBT+ young people, absolutely need more mental health resources, and LGBT+ young people absolutely need more support and skills. But that same figure could be taken and misused to say ‘Clearly being LGBT+ is really bad for young people’”. |
Representations of Orientations and Identities | |
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Social change | “With people being more open, younger generations are saying that sexuality is not set in stone”.“It’s more of a continuum than an end-to-end binary thing” It’s much less of a kind of dichotomy’ “I think there’s much more openness and space for LGBT+ younger people, and younger people in general, and just people in general to not be so fixed around sexuality and gender. And there’s no sense of ‘Oh no, you can’t change’; that way it’s not a big deal, it’s just about understanding”. “The idea of sexuality as fluid wasn’t a way of thinking for older generations. I think that we could even see that around my generation, you know.So, I think, maybe, it is easier to reflect nowadays, than it would have been 30 years ago”. |
Self-identification | “People should be able to self-identify, because identity isn’t assembled from people’s experiences, it’s how they choose to see themselves. Then people stop feeling they have to tick things off, like a checklist, they can just validate themselves”. “There’s no pressure, nobody’s making a big deal out of it, which is probably making it easier for young people who are questioning or exploring their sexuality or their gender”. “So, a lot of people may identify as non-binary or start using multiple pronouns. And that’s something that you never would have really seen five years ago when we were 16”. “I definitely think younger people now are more comfortable in being unsure: ‘I’m not sure yet, but it’s not a big deal’. They are way more accepting of the fluidity and the’ let’s figure it out’, rather than the’ let’s stress about it until we know for sure’”. |
Fluidity in identity | “I think understanding and accepting that these change–the terms and definitions change, people’s identities change, that everything is fluid”. “I know as people grow into older stages of their lives, this changes, how they identify changes. If you were to ask them about their sexuality when they were younger, they would have been straight. A bit older, bisexual. By 17 they wouldn’t really have known at all. And by 20 were quite solid and secure in their identity”. “I wouldn’t be surprized if the same people, when they’re older again, how they identify changes”. “Because it’s fluid and ever changing how the LGBT+ community use these terms”. |
Understanding of orientations and identities | “Part of the beauty of the LGBT+ community, as a whole, as a broader thing, is that it’s messy. Not every person who is a lesbian, has the exact same feelings about being a lesbian. Not everybody who’s gay or bi or trans has the same finite experience. People stop trying to get the fine print of their identity down”. “I think that identity is more complicated than the literal word-for-word definition of the label that you use to describe yourself. It’s absolutely more complex than that”. “Given that we’re seeing broad variation with sexual orientation, it’s quite likely that as things evolve and develop, there will definitely be different ways that people begin to identify regarding gender”. |
(In)Visibility within Education | |
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Familiarity with orientations and identities | “Sometimes you can forget that there are people who do not engage with the LGBT+ community at all, and are like ‘I don’t know and I don’t care’. Then there are those who don’t know what any of the words mean and don’t understand the language” “I think another element of that is the lack of familiarity with the terminology. There are going to be so many people who are not familiar with the language, options, labels–even within the LGBT+ community”. “People who are probably not LGBT+ may not understand questions that are well understood by those who identify as LGBT+”. “A key thing about this is the fact that not everyone has such a wide-scoping understanding of the LGBT+ identities”. “I think, making it more straightforward... [pause] So, this is straightforward from my perspective, but obviously it’s probably not for a younger person who hasn’t been involved in anything LGBT+ related”. “I would hear ‘sexuality’ used more often, I think, than, ‘sexual orientation’ when talking about identity; heterosexual people definitely have a sexuality”. |
Gaps in understanding | “I feel like people seem to understand straight, gay and bi. If your one of those three, people understand that a bit easier. Beyond that it’s just so much more complex to explain, to go into a whole explanation of expression and identity. And then to start explaining about gender identity”. “We’ve sort of moved on now that people do actually recognize that they have a sexual orientation. We might not have completely moved on in terms of gender identity. It used to be: ‘Sexuality equals gay and I’m not gay, so I don’t have a sexual orientation’. Maybe we’re seeing that with pronouns and people saying they don’t have pronouns”. “I know a lot of people and they’ll say to me, ‘Am I heterosexual, or what am I?’ that kind of way. Not everybody understands even what they are. I feel like lots of cisgender, heterosexual people, might have heard the words ‘homosexual’ or ‘transgender’ but have never heard of ‘cisgender’ or ‘heterosexual’”. “I find lots of times people who may not be in the LGBT+ community are like: ‘I don’t have one of those labels’. They just see sexual orientation as: ‘I don’t have that’. And it’s the same for gender. People don’t think they have a gender identity. There’s the whole thing when people say: ‘I don’t have pronouns,’ and I say: ‘you do, we all do’” |
Gaps in education | “I think the education system needs to educate young people. We can’t ask the questions, yet, because people don’t know what sexual orientation or gender identity is, what these things mean. I think that’s an emerging area. We don’t have great answers, yet. The answers, I think, are contingent on better education. We’re not just there, yet”. “I was talking to a class in their final school year and they did find it confusing. That was interesting to see as well–these were 17–18-year-olds, so they shouldn’t have issues. But that is a problem with our education system”. “So, it wasn’t it wasn’t something that was massively understood or seen as important”. “But, you know the fact that the correct level of education in this country is not there. People should know about sexuality, gender and pronouns. But they don’t because that’s not what they’re taught, at all”. “There’s a difference between information and education. They have the information but nobody is necessarily explaining things. There’s no person who is the conduit of that information. It’s not being taught; they’re just taking in information and trying to make sense of it themselves.”. “I know we’ve come on leaps and bounds, but if schools were more accepting, if there was comprehensive Relationships and Sexuality Education, it could help further destigmatize”. |
Alternative sources of information | “I suppose, especially recently, we have this incredibly online world and LGBT+ communities are very online.Younger kids are more aware of being LGBT+ and these online communities. And they have more words to experiment with”. “Because obviously kids have questions and Google it”. “I think when they have access to the Internet and micro identities, and they’re too young to understand it, and it’s not in a context where people around them understand it, and they can’t have any help from family, or friends, or teachers, or school, and they’re not being taught any of it, and all their education comes from the Internet. That’s scary”. “If no one is teaching you something, you’re going to do the best with what you have. Or you make sense of it, the way you can. It’s nearly like there’s too much information, but there still isn’t the teaching element of giving kids the information directly and teaching them about it”. “I’ve usually seen it online, where people go into a live stream and ask: ‘What are your pronouns?’ and some people are like ‘I don’t have pronouns,’ and there’s the whole miseducation and misinformation”. |
Young people as educators | “I know a lot of young people express that same thing–that they are the ‘go-to’ people for ‘the gay facts, the gay news’ [makes quote marks with fingers], you know”. “A social worker rang me and was like ‘I have this young person here and they’re saying that they are [pauses and carefully sounds out] pansexual. What’s that?’ And I had to explain the whole thing about gender and gender fluidity. “The year marriage equality happened, I was in my final year of school, and it was very topical. Home economics seemed to be the class that it was brought up the most. People would turn around and look at me, they would ask a question, and my teacher would look to me for an answer”. “I think it could be difficult for young people to have to explain; it could be perceived in astigmatizingway–they might take it as ‘what’s wrong with you?I’m very comfortable talking about everything. So, for me, I have no problem chatting about things like that”. “I’ve often I found that when people say you need to simplify this for people who are non-LGBT+ it ends up that LGBT+ communities aren’t actually being centered in the work”. |
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Ceatha, N.; Kelly, A.; Killeen, T.; McCabe, K.; Murray, J.; Pope, J.; Scully, N.; Buggy, C. Beyond ‘Voice’ to ‘Learning with’: A Multiple Streams Policy Analysis and Qualitative Exploration Problematizing Representations of Young LGBT+ Identities. Youth 2022, 2, 479-504. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040035
Ceatha N, Kelly A, Killeen T, McCabe K, Murray J, Pope J, Scully N, Buggy C. Beyond ‘Voice’ to ‘Learning with’: A Multiple Streams Policy Analysis and Qualitative Exploration Problematizing Representations of Young LGBT+ Identities. Youth. 2022; 2(4):479-504. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040035
Chicago/Turabian StyleCeatha, Nerilee, Ayrton Kelly, Tara Killeen, Katie McCabe, James Murray, Jayson Pope, Niamh Scully, and Conor Buggy. 2022. "Beyond ‘Voice’ to ‘Learning with’: A Multiple Streams Policy Analysis and Qualitative Exploration Problematizing Representations of Young LGBT+ Identities" Youth 2, no. 4: 479-504. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040035
APA StyleCeatha, N., Kelly, A., Killeen, T., McCabe, K., Murray, J., Pope, J., Scully, N., & Buggy, C. (2022). Beyond ‘Voice’ to ‘Learning with’: A Multiple Streams Policy Analysis and Qualitative Exploration Problematizing Representations of Young LGBT+ Identities. Youth, 2(4), 479-504. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth2040035