LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in Education

In the article, we focus on young LGBTIQ+ individuals’ experiences with violence in education. Research show that LGBTIQ+ youth are targeted with various forms of violence within education; while most research focuses on peer-to-peer violence, the violence perpetrated by school workers, and their in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nina Perger
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculy of Arts) 2018-07-01
Series:Ars & Humanitas
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/arshumanitas/article/view/8001
id doaj-d8fca1c7a315462fb3326fb1e3d3823c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d8fca1c7a315462fb3326fb1e3d3823c2021-03-02T06:52:18ZdeuZnanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculy of Arts)Ars & Humanitas1854-96322350-42182018-07-011218810310.4312/ars.12.1.88-1038001LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in EducationNina PergerIn the article, we focus on young LGBTIQ+ individuals’ experiences with violence in education. Research show that LGBTIQ+ youth are targeted with various forms of violence within education; while most research focuses on peer-to-peer violence, the violence perpetrated by school workers, and their inactivity when it comes to addressing violence on the basis of gender and sexual identity, is often neglected. In the article, data gathered in the research Everyday life of young LGBTIQ+ individuals, as implemented by Pride Association in 2017, is presented. A total of 751 young LGBTIQ+ individuals aged between 16-30 participated in this research. In this article we focus on a specific aspect regarding their experiences with violence in education, namely, their experiences with violence perpetrated by schoolmates and school workers, including teachers and counsel workers, as well as on their feelings of safety in the school hallways and classrooms. Such violence is often addressed by ‘bullying discourse’, which rarely takes into account hetero- and cisnormative social structures and their manifestations in education, and it predominantly addresses bullying as a form of individual pathology and not as practices of violence that derive their disciplinary power in terms of enforcing normative enactments of gender and sexuality. In this regard, violence against young LGBTIQ+ individuals in education should be addressed within a broader framework that takes into account social power relations.https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/arshumanitas/article/view/8001LGBTIQ , education, violence, power relations
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina Perger
spellingShingle Nina Perger
LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in Education
Ars & Humanitas
LGBTIQ , education, violence, power relations
author_facet Nina Perger
author_sort Nina Perger
title LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in Education
title_short LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in Education
title_full LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in Education
title_fullStr LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in Education
title_full_unstemmed LGBTIQ+ Youth and Experiences with Violence in Education
title_sort lgbtiq+ youth and experiences with violence in education
publisher Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculy of Arts)
series Ars & Humanitas
issn 1854-9632
2350-4218
publishDate 2018-07-01
description In the article, we focus on young LGBTIQ+ individuals’ experiences with violence in education. Research show that LGBTIQ+ youth are targeted with various forms of violence within education; while most research focuses on peer-to-peer violence, the violence perpetrated by school workers, and their inactivity when it comes to addressing violence on the basis of gender and sexual identity, is often neglected. In the article, data gathered in the research Everyday life of young LGBTIQ+ individuals, as implemented by Pride Association in 2017, is presented. A total of 751 young LGBTIQ+ individuals aged between 16-30 participated in this research. In this article we focus on a specific aspect regarding their experiences with violence in education, namely, their experiences with violence perpetrated by schoolmates and school workers, including teachers and counsel workers, as well as on their feelings of safety in the school hallways and classrooms. Such violence is often addressed by ‘bullying discourse’, which rarely takes into account hetero- and cisnormative social structures and their manifestations in education, and it predominantly addresses bullying as a form of individual pathology and not as practices of violence that derive their disciplinary power in terms of enforcing normative enactments of gender and sexuality. In this regard, violence against young LGBTIQ+ individuals in education should be addressed within a broader framework that takes into account social power relations.
topic LGBTIQ , education, violence, power relations
url https://revije.ff.uni-lj.si/arshumanitas/article/view/8001
work_keys_str_mv AT ninaperger lgbtiqyouthandexperienceswithviolenceineducation
_version_ 1724241938948816896