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* Home * About * Contact Us * Leadership & Committees * Mentoring * Upcoming Events * DQC Events * Conferences * Related Events * Resources * Research * Teaching * Professional Organizations & Advocacy Groups * Graduate Programs * Search * Menu Menu HOME DIVISION ON QUEER CRIMINOLOGY https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/woman-holding-multicolored-umbrella-while-looking-down-1838147-687x1030-1.jpg [Image description: A person with sunglasses, makeup, and an animal print jacket is facing the camera while holding a rainbow umbrella.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/close-up-photo-of-a-man-wearing-make-up-2725464-687x1030-1.jpg [Image description: A person facing the camera has makeup on, a necklace, mesh shirt, and short black hair. There is a rainbow flag behind them.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/pexels-photo-2893794-1030x686-1.jpeg [Image description: A photograph of a crowd of people holding signs at a protest in front of a building. A person facing away from the camera wrapped in small pride flags is holding a sign that reads 'We support all women.'] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/man-holding-rainbow-color-flag-1800994-1030x688-1.jpg [Image description: A photograph of a person with makeup and brown hair is facing away from the camera. They are wrapped in a pride flag on an orange background.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/FWXHzGeXkAExkCv-1280x720.jpg [Image text: Congratulations to DQC member Dr. Val Jenness on her election as President of ASC! Dr. Jenness has conducted groundbreaking research on how gender and sexuality shapes incarceration, particularly for trans people in the United States.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/DQC-Full-Logo-1030x392-1.jpeg [Image Description: On a white background with the letters DQC in the background in the middle is black glittery text that reads 'Division on Queer Criminology A division of the American Society of Criminology'] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/DQC-Mentoring-Program-Ad.jpg [Image description: On a white and light green background in the center are glittery letters that read Division on Queer Criminology centered at the top. In the top left corner is a red stamp graphic with the words 'Coming soon.' The text underneath reads 'Call for Applicants: DQC Mentoring program. We welcome participation from potential mentees and mentors at ALL career phases from anywhere in the world! Applicants will be matched based on shared goals/needs and areas of interest. Mentorship goals/outcomes can include completing shared projects, professional development (e.g., job market, teaching support), or navigating academia. The program will be facilitated for one-year (November-November), but we hope your connections last far beyond the duration of the program. Applications are due September 2nd! For more information, please contact DQC's Mentoring Committee Co-Chairs: Suzy Avalos (they/she) s1avalos@odu.edu and Breanna Boppre (she/her) bxb078@shsu.edu] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/woman-opening-her-mouth-2336840-1030x687-1.jpg [Image description: A person with rainbow hair and sunglasses is facing the camera and yelling.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/DQC-Alyse-Sherrick.jpg [Image description: A person is sitting on the ground facing away from the camera. They are sitting against a wall that is painted with rainbow colors.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/QUEER-CRIM-Katie-and-Shelly-Shelly-Clevenger-1280x1213.jpg [Image description: Two people are sitting at a table facing the camera. On the front of the table a banner reads "Division on Queer Criminology", there is paper and a book on the table. The person on the left has glasses, short dark hair, a light brown sweater, and is wearing a name tag around their neck. The person on the left has colorful glasses, shoulder length red hair, is wearing a blue top and jacket. There are people behind them talking at another table.] SUBMISSION2 https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/image0-Sarah-Rogers-1-1280x1280.jpeg [Image description: A picture of Harvey Milk Plaza at the corner of Market and Castro in San Francisco, USA. On the top there is a building with pride flags on the top with lettering that reads 'Hope will never be silent.' On the bottom left is a street sign that has colorful letters which spell 'Castro" which is on a brick street. On the bottom right there is a picture of the street which is painted with rainbow stripes.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/IMG_2998.jpg https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/Chewy-at-Pride-1-1280x1280.jpeg [Image description: A picture of a white dog with a rainbow bandana around their neck that reads PRIDE in white text.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/Drag-Bingo-2013-128-Hank-Fradella.jpg [Image description: With a background that reads 'The Melonhead Foundation with a watermelon slice' and it says 'Drag Bingo.' There are four people facing the camera, three of them are drag queen performers, 'The Rainbow Girls' in various costumes with Hank in the middle who has short brown hair and a striped shirt.] EMILY AND CARRIE https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/Emily-and-Carrie-QC-Book-Award-Emily-Lenning.jpg [Image description: There are two people holding wooden awards and they are standing in front of a brick wall. On the left is Carrie, who is wearing glasses, has shoulder length brown hair, a black blazer, red shirt, and a necklace. On the right is Emily, who has short blonde hair, a black and white shirt, with a black cardigan.] https://queercrim.com/wp-content/uploads/Emiily-Pride-Pic-Emily-Lenning.jpg [Image description: Emily, who has short blonde hair, a black shirt that says Fayetteville North Carolina in rainbow letters, with jeans and flip-flops. She is holding two signs, one that says #NationalComingOutDay and #FAYNCPRIDE. In the background are shirts hanging and rainbow flags. There is a purse in the bottom right corner.] Previous Image Next Image [Image description: A person with sunglasses, makeup, and an animal print jacket is facing the camera while holding a rainbow umbrella.] DQC Internal Award Winners 2022 Emerging Scholar Award: Dr. Allyn Walker Honorable Mention: Dr. Lindsey Kahle Semprevivo Community Engagement and Activism: Dr. April Carrillo Teaching Award: Dr. Vanessa Panfil Student Paper Award: Alessandra Early Honorable Mention: Susana Avalos ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————– * DQC Statement on Trans InclusivityMarch 2, 2021 The Division on Queer Criminology (DQC) Formal Statement on Trans Inclusivity The DQC is a trans, non-binary, and gender diverse-inclusive organization. We value, support, and stand in solidarity with those who experience negativity, harassment, threats, discrimination, and violence associated with their gender identities. We do not tolerate transphobic hate speech nor anti-trans legislation. Furthermore, we reject sexism, racism, heterosexism, bigotry, or any oppressive speech grounded in social class, disability, age, gender identity, education, sexuality, rurality, or religiosity. We are dedicated to dismantling heterosexism, transphobia, white supremacy, white nationalism, and racism within our scholarship, our universities, our classrooms, and our communities. We are aware of recent and continued trans-exclusionary writings, including those that claim to be “feminist,” and we do not support the publication of such works. We wholeheartedly reject any writings that contend sex or gender are wholly grounded in anatomy and we reject arguments that adopt essentialist ways of understanding these ideas. We do not wish to further engage with such oppressive narratives or provide a platform for them. We believe in a feminism that is inclusive of trans, non-binary, and gender diverse people and upholds and supports our/their gender identities. Following the work of feminists who experience multiple layers of marginalization across gender, race/ethnicity, class, and sexuality, we recognize that oppressions emerge from a multiplicity of factors rather than a singular point of origin, and our purpose is to attend to, and end, the unsettling social, political, and economic circumstances that produce and perpetuate these oppressions. Through our collective works, the DQC connects researchers with policymakers in order to make meaningful change with and for trans, non-binary, and gender diverse people and communities. The DQC recognizes both gender and sex as complex and evolving social constructs: neither are binary. We reject biological determinism and gender essentialism. We situate ourselves as a space of support when anti-trans types of thinking are made public or published. We understand the pain and hurt that is caused by these forms of academic and other public discourse. We do not support assertions that are based on harmful, unsubstantiated claims, and/or stereotypes that have been mobilized in political discourse to overtly or covertly harm trans, non-binary, and gender diverse people and communities by excluding us/them from protections granted to cisgender people. We believe that policies and legal statutes focusing on sex-based discrimination should be inclusive of gender identities. We align with the 2020 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits sex discrimination, is inclusive of sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity as protected statuses. The DQC stands in unity and solidarity as an advocate for the necessity of increasing protections and consideration for all groups who have been systematically oppressed. We believe in the value of striving for inclusivity, care, and protection for society’s most vulnerable populations. As an organization, we make the following commitments to overcoming harms toward trans, non-binary, and gender diverse people: * To reaffirm at all our gatherings and events that our spaces are safe spaces for trans, non-binary, and gender diverse people * To actively exclude speakers/groups who delegitimate trans, non-binary, and gender diverse people from any of our events and from our organization * To raise awareness about how institutional harm, structural marginalization, and violence disproportionately affect trans individuals (and in particular, Black trans women and other trans women of color) * To work with trans, non-binary, and gender diverse people to convene events specifically focused on securing our/their social, economic, political, and cultural justice Trans rights are human rights. Further reading: TERF Wars: Feminism and the fight for transgender futures, Sociological Review, Volume 68, Issue 4, 2020. * What is Queer Criminology?November 17, 2019 “Queer criminology is a theoretical and practical approach that seeks to highlight and draw attention to the stigmatization, the criminalization, and in many ways the rejection of the Queer community, which is to say the LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) population, as both victims and offenders, by academe and the criminal legal system” ~Carrie L. Buist and Emily Lenning, Queer Criminology __________________________________________________________________________________ On Racial Inequity & Black Lives Matter The Division on Queer Criminology is committed to the Black Lives Matter movement. We recognize and denounce the history of systemic oppression based in White supremacy and the racialized violence that continues to harm Black, Indigenous, and other people of color that occurs in the criminal justice system, in academia, and elsewhere. We stand in solidarity with those who experience such inequities and those who seek to hear the voices of Black, Indigenous, and other people of color. * Twitter * Facebook © Copyright - Division on Queer Criminology - Enfold Theme by Kriesi * Twitter * Facebook Scroll to top