Literature DB >> 19288351

Political intersections between HIV/AIDS, sexuality and human rights: a history of resistance to the anti-sodomy law in India.

R Ramasubban1.   

Abstract

The HIV/AIDS epidemic in India has posed unprecedented challenges to both state and society, to question prevailing constructions of patriarchal gender relations and heteronormativity. Response to the challenge has come not from the political and social mainstream but from the criminalised "margins": people of alternative sexualities, who have launched a struggle for reform of the anti-sodomy law, Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code. This article documents the history of this movement, and identifies the multiple national and global-level cultural, political, and economic strands, shaping it. The legal reform movement has been invaluable as a tool to mobilise disparate alternative sexualities groups around a common strategy, thereby forging them into a tenuous national-level "community". Going beyond legal reform in the direction of sexual rights, however, requires a broader coalition of groups, and a broad-based political agenda of sexual rights for all. This agenda must critique patriarchy, dominant masculinity, and sexual violence; forces that together govern both the subordination of women and repression of alternative sexualities.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19288351     DOI: 10.1080/17441690801990655

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Public Health        ISSN: 1744-1692


  1 in total

1.  Pushback: the current wave of anti-homosexuality laws and impacts on health.

Authors:  Chris Beyrer
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2014-06-24       Impact factor: 11.069

  1 in total

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