Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrative

Background. Based on a long personal story of dealing with LGBTQ rights in Russia, the author reviews several transformations in the psychological approach and research to gender and sexual identity. The author describes his professional growth as a psychologist. First his interest was in child sex-...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Igor I. Lunin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University 2017-06-01
Series:Psychology in Russia: State of Art
Subjects:
Kon
Online Access:http://psychologyinrussia.com/volumes/index.php?article=6437
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spelling doaj-d199b6a002584dfc8490fa95434144572020-11-25T02:42:31ZengM.V. Lomonosov Moscow State UniversityPsychology in Russia: State of Art2074-68572307-22022017-06-01102354110.11621/pir.2017.0203Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrativeIgor I. LuninBackground. Based on a long personal story of dealing with LGBTQ rights in Russia, the author reviews several transformations in the psychological approach and research to gender and sexual identity. The author describes his professional growth as a psychologist. First his interest was in child sex-role development and then transformed to prevention of sexual crimes, AIDS prevention and sexual education among adolescents. The author shows how his area of expertise in human sexuality brought him to professional ethics for psychologists. Discussion. In the second part of the article the author reviews changes in social attitudes towards same sex- relationships from their criminalization and medicalization to acceptance and respect. The author emphasizes the pioneering role of Professor Igor Kon in changes of mass attitudes towards sexuality and same sex relationships. The author sees Kon’s legacy in his statement that “As long as gays and lesbians are objects of bullying and discrimination, everybody who considers himself/herself as a thinking person must support LGBTQ people’s fight for their human rights.” At the end of this part of the article, the author describes a recent hate crime based in homophobia, and its victim, the talented St. Petersburg journalist, Dmitry Tsilikin. Tsilikin was involved in sex education in the 1990s and published a book about these issues. His murder was not considered by the court to be a hate crime against an LGBTQ person, despite enormous protest from progressive-minded people all over Russia. Conclusion. The author recommends the Russian Psychological Ethics Code as a way to help psychologists support and advocate for people regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.http://psychologyinrussia.com/volumes/index.php?article=6437RussiaLGBTQEthics CodeKon; Tsilikin; psychologyKonTsililinpsychology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Igor I. Lunin
spellingShingle Igor I. Lunin
Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrative
Psychology in Russia: State of Art
Russia
LGBTQ
Ethics Code
Kon; Tsilikin; psychology
Kon
Tsililin
psychology
author_facet Igor I. Lunin
author_sort Igor I. Lunin
title Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrative
title_short Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrative
title_full Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrative
title_fullStr Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrative
title_full_unstemmed Striving for LGBTQ rights in Russian psychology and society: A personal narrative
title_sort striving for lgbtq rights in russian psychology and society: a personal narrative
publisher M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University
series Psychology in Russia: State of Art
issn 2074-6857
2307-2202
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Background. Based on a long personal story of dealing with LGBTQ rights in Russia, the author reviews several transformations in the psychological approach and research to gender and sexual identity. The author describes his professional growth as a psychologist. First his interest was in child sex-role development and then transformed to prevention of sexual crimes, AIDS prevention and sexual education among adolescents. The author shows how his area of expertise in human sexuality brought him to professional ethics for psychologists. Discussion. In the second part of the article the author reviews changes in social attitudes towards same sex- relationships from their criminalization and medicalization to acceptance and respect. The author emphasizes the pioneering role of Professor Igor Kon in changes of mass attitudes towards sexuality and same sex relationships. The author sees Kon’s legacy in his statement that “As long as gays and lesbians are objects of bullying and discrimination, everybody who considers himself/herself as a thinking person must support LGBTQ people’s fight for their human rights.” At the end of this part of the article, the author describes a recent hate crime based in homophobia, and its victim, the talented St. Petersburg journalist, Dmitry Tsilikin. Tsilikin was involved in sex education in the 1990s and published a book about these issues. His murder was not considered by the court to be a hate crime against an LGBTQ person, despite enormous protest from progressive-minded people all over Russia. Conclusion. The author recommends the Russian Psychological Ethics Code as a way to help psychologists support and advocate for people regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.
topic Russia
LGBTQ
Ethics Code
Kon; Tsilikin; psychology
Kon
Tsililin
psychology
url http://psychologyinrussia.com/volumes/index.php?article=6437
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