Playing Recognition Politics: Queer Theoretical Reflections on Lesbian, Gay, and Queer Youth Social Policy in Australia in the 1980s and 1990s

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Rasmussen, Mary Lou
Southerton, Clare
Fela, Geraldine
Marshall, Daniel
Cover, Rob
Aggleton, Peter

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Springer Verlag

Abstract

This article provides a queer theoretical refection on the emergence of lesbian, gay, and queer (LGQ) youth as subjects of policy attention in Australia in the late twentieth century. In particular, it focuses on the ways in which specifc forms of social, bureaucratic, and organizational recognition have given shape to LGQ youth as categorical policy objects. To this end, this article critically interrogates social policy related to the provision of funding for LGQ youth support during the 1980s and 1990s in two Australian states: New South Wales and Western Australia. More specifcally, it focuses on some of the ways in which LGQ youth have been discursively shaped and materially supported in three diferent organizations, two of which continue to be strongly associated with support of LGQ youth in Australia. This study of the emergence of these organizations, resourced by three diferent sectors—the state, the church, and the LGQ community itself—necessarily draws on ephemeral resources, refecting the conditions of possibility in which this work was being enacted. We conclude with an analysis of the necessity for situating policy recognitions within specifc contexts to examine the implications for LGQ youth as the subjects such recognitions simultaneously seek to constitute and serve.

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Archives of Sexual Behavior

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Open Access

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