Discrimination on Grounds of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in Education
A special issue of European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education (ISSN 2254-9625).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 October 2022) | Viewed by 2750
Special Issue Editor
Interests: education and citizenship in the global era; education for sustainability; gender equality and women's empowerment (goal 5: sustainable development objectives); curricular inclusion of social problems in education; anthropology and teaching of the social and human sciences; language and literature didactics; mixed methods research
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Educational environments play a critical role in shaping psychosocial development [4], as well as in the construction of personal and social identities. Non-cisgender sexual diversities face hostility, discrimination and violence in primary and secondary schools. While blatant violence still occurs, subtle discrimination, sexual rumor mongering and transphobia are now more common in educational settings. In these settings, studies have suggested that interpersonal heterosexism and sexual harassment contribute to negative psychological outcomes.
Similarly, the intersection of sexual and gender identities in the student population appears to be related to the levels of emotional distress and bullying victimization [3]. In this regard, research by Atteberry-Ash et al. [1] demonstrated that young people who experience marginalization on the basis of their sexual orientation and gender identity are at an elevated risk of experiencing sexual violence.
Recently, empirical attention has also been paid to micro-aggressions on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity; however, more research and specific actions are required to eradicate these micro-aggressions. Although discrimination has been shown to be less prevalent in schools with inclusive policies and programs, the effectiveness of these programs and policies in reducing discrimination on the basis of gender (gender expression and identity, sexual orientation and diverse characteristics) has not been examined to date.
Based on these diagnoses, and from the perspective of education for plural and inclusive democratic citizenship, this Special Issue seeks to respond to the following questions:
- How do socio-educational actors respond to overt and veiled discrimination against sexual and gender minorities?
- What training programs have been implemented at different educational levels for the eradication of this type of discrimination?
- What psychosocial and educational factors are involved in the self-esteem and achievement levels of students who experience sexual orientation- and gender identity-based bullying?
- What education policies have been proposed to address gender-based violence targeting self-identified LGBTIQ+ students? What are their outcomes?
Expression of sexual orientation and gender identity biases in social and psychological research
Bias responds to associations based on negative prejudices, permeable to scientific research [2]. Its identification will result in the proposals containing bias to be rejected. Some of the most common expressions of bias are described below:
- Lax use of relevant concepts, such as sex, gender and identity;
- Standardization of heterosexual/cissexist experiences, in which it is assumed that all human experiences are (and should be) strictly hetero/cis;
- Presence of supposedly universal assumptions, such as gender binarism;
- Presumption of normality of heterosexuality/cissexuality, and pathologization or alterity of sexual orientation and/or gender identity;
- Assumption of homogeneity, in which other sexual orientations and/or gender identities are treated as a class.
References
- Atteberry-Ash, B.; Walls, N.E.; Kattari, S.K.; Peitzmeier, S.M.; Kattari, L.; Langenderfer-Magruder, L. Forced sex among youth: Accrual of risk by gender identity, sexual orientation, mental health and bullying. J. LGBT Youth 2020, 17, 193–213. https://doi.org/10.1080/19361653.2019.1614131.
- Barrientos, J.; Radi, B. Avoiding hetero/cissexist bias in psychological research: A contribution from latin America. Interam. J. Psychol. 2021, 55, e1631.
- Eisenberg, M.E.; Gower, A.L.; Rider, G.N.; McMorris, B.J.; Coleman, E. At the intersection of sexual orientation and gender identity: Variations in emotional distress and bullying experience in a large population-based sample of U.S. adolescents. J. LGBT Youth 2019, 16, 235–254. https://doi.org/10.1080/19361653.2019.1567435.
- Sterzing, P.R.; Gartner, R.E.; Woodford, M.R.; Fisher, C.M. Sexual Orientation, Gender, and Gender Identity Microaggressions: Toward an Intersectional Framework for Social Work Research. J. Ethn. Cult. Divers. Soc. Work 2017, 26, 81–94. https://doi.org/10.1080/15313204.2016.1263819.
Prof. Dr. Delfín Ortega-Sánchez
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- discrimination
- sexual orientation
- gender identity
- sexual diversity education
- LGBTIQ+
- psychosocial and educational factors
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