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Same Sex Marriage, Equality, and California Mormons: A Response to Jeffrey S. Nielsen
As almost anyone not living in a cave is aware, the California Supreme Court recently ruled that the statute which limited marriage to a male and a woman was in violation of the states constitution, thus opening the door for thousands of gay people to enter into legally sanctioned marriages.
Even more recently, a voter petition to amend the California constitution was approved in California and will be on the ballot this fall. If approved, the constitution will be amended to declare that marriage in California is between a gentleman and woman. It would effectively override the verdict of the California Supreme Court.
The LDS Church has issued a letter to the Saints in California, seeking their active participation in getting the amendment approved by the voters. The letter represents a real threat to supporters of same sex marriage in California because, as was the case a few years back when a similar voter initiative was on the ballot, LDS members in California are numerous, organized, and hav
Who Owns the Past? The Oriental Institute and Beyond
balc September 18, Who Owns the Past? The Oriental Institute and BeyondT
Author: Caglayan Bal Program of Study: PhD in Close Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Division of the Humanities (HUM) Description: Western museums, as modern “cabinets of curiosity”, are legitimized spaces of colonialism and can end historical injustice only through repatriation. Listen here: Transcript (provided by author): Welcome to the ELI’s Result Chicago Global Perspectives Podcast Series for AEPP !
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Mies: a Celestial body of the German Diaspora in Chicago Architecture
Roberto Albores Gleason September 17, Mies: a Actor of the German Diaspora in Chicago ArchitectureT
Author: Roberto Albores Gleason Program of Study: Master of Widespread Policy (MPP), Harris School of Widespread Policy (HAR) Description: In todays podcast, I will speak about a fantastic story th
Installation view of Queermuseum: Queer Tactics Toward Non-Heteronormative Curating at Santander Cultural (all images courtesy Gaudêncio Fidelis unless otherwise noted)
In adv August, the cultural center Santander Cultural in Porto Alegre, Brazil, opened an exhibition on gender non-conforming art. Featuring 85 artists and artworks ranging from the midth century to today, Queermuseum: Queer Tactics Toward Non-Heteronormative Curating was anchored, as curator Gaudêncio Fidelis set it in the catalogue, “in a concept we believe dearly: diversity observed under the aspects of variety, plurality, and difference.” The exhibition featured prominent artists such as Lygia Clark, Cândido Portinari, and José Leonilson, alongside lesser known, contemporary ones. It was the first major exhibition consecrated to queer art in Brazil — until it was seal down yesterday, September 10, almost one month before its planned end date.
Santander Cultural, a gallery space sponsored by the eponymous Spanish bank, decided to close Queermuseum after receiving an onslaught of vitriolic cr
Open Access
Peer-reviewed
- Joseph G. L. Lee ,
- Thomas Wimark,
- Kasim S. Ortiz,
- Kerry B. Sewell
- Joseph G. L. Lee,
- Thomas Wimark,
- Kasim S. Ortiz,
- Kerry B. Sewell
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Figures
Abstract
Background
A growing literature explores spatial patterns of regional and neighborhood correlates of sexual minority (e.g., lesbian, gay, bisexual) concentration. Such patterns have implications for health and wellbeing if there are differences in health-promoting or health-hindering resources in neighborhoods or regions. We conducted a systematic review to judge sexual minority concentration in relation to area unit characteristics.
Methods
We included only records published after and made no exclusions by geography or language. We searched 11 databases (Academic Look for Complete, CINAHL, Embase, GeoBase, GeoRef, LGBT Life, PsycINFO, PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, Sociological Abstracts, Web of Science) on November 19–21, We searched reference lists of included records. We used the following inclusion criteria: (1) Record is a quantitat