Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia

At the time of writing, all three elements that are evoked in the title – emancipation and social inclusion of sexual minorities, labour and labour activism, and the idea and substance of “Europe” – are being invested by deep, long-term, and – to varied degrees – radical processes of social transfor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dioli, Irene <1980>
Other Authors: Martelli, Alessandro
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/5995/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-59952014-09-23T04:49:29Z Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia Dioli, Irene <1980> SPS/09 Sociologia dei processi economici e del lavoro At the time of writing, all three elements that are evoked in the title – emancipation and social inclusion of sexual minorities, labour and labour activism, and the idea and substance of “Europe” – are being invested by deep, long-term, and – to varied degrees – radical processes of social transformation. The meaning of words like “equality”, “rights”, “inclusion”, and even “democracy” is as precarious and uncertain as are the lives of those European citizens who are marginalised by intersecting conditions of gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and class – in a constellation of precarities that is both unifying and fragmented (fragmenting). Conflicts are played, in hidden or explicit ways, over material processes of redistribution as well as discursive practices that revolve around these words. Against this backdrop, and roughly ten years after the European Union provided an input for institutional commitment to the protection of LGBT* workers' rights with the Council Directive 2000/78/EC, the dissertation contrasts discourses on workplace equality for LGBT* persons produced by a plurality of actors, seeking to identify values, semantics, and agendas framing and informing organisations’ views and showing how each actor has incorporated LGBT* rights into its own discourse, each time in a way that is functional to the construction and/or confirmation of its organisational identity: transnational union networks, by presenting LGBT* rights as a natural, neutral commitment within the framework of universal human rights protection; left-wing organisations, by collocating activism for LGBT* rights within a wider project of social emancipation that is for all the marginalised, yet is not neutral, but attached to specific values and opposed to specific political adversaries (the right-wing, the nationalists); business networks, by acknowledging diversity as a path to better performance and profits, thus encouraging inclusion and non-discrimination of “deserving” LGBT* workers. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Martelli, Alessandro 2013-06-10 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/5995/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic SPS/09 Sociologia dei processi economici e del lavoro
spellingShingle SPS/09 Sociologia dei processi economici e del lavoro
Dioli, Irene <1980>
Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia
description At the time of writing, all three elements that are evoked in the title – emancipation and social inclusion of sexual minorities, labour and labour activism, and the idea and substance of “Europe” – are being invested by deep, long-term, and – to varied degrees – radical processes of social transformation. The meaning of words like “equality”, “rights”, “inclusion”, and even “democracy” is as precarious and uncertain as are the lives of those European citizens who are marginalised by intersecting conditions of gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and class – in a constellation of precarities that is both unifying and fragmented (fragmenting). Conflicts are played, in hidden or explicit ways, over material processes of redistribution as well as discursive practices that revolve around these words. Against this backdrop, and roughly ten years after the European Union provided an input for institutional commitment to the protection of LGBT* workers' rights with the Council Directive 2000/78/EC, the dissertation contrasts discourses on workplace equality for LGBT* persons produced by a plurality of actors, seeking to identify values, semantics, and agendas framing and informing organisations’ views and showing how each actor has incorporated LGBT* rights into its own discourse, each time in a way that is functional to the construction and/or confirmation of its organisational identity: transnational union networks, by presenting LGBT* rights as a natural, neutral commitment within the framework of universal human rights protection; left-wing organisations, by collocating activism for LGBT* rights within a wider project of social emancipation that is for all the marginalised, yet is not neutral, but attached to specific values and opposed to specific political adversaries (the right-wing, the nationalists); business networks, by acknowledging diversity as a path to better performance and profits, thus encouraging inclusion and non-discrimination of “deserving” LGBT* workers.
author2 Martelli, Alessandro
author_facet Martelli, Alessandro
Dioli, Irene <1980>
author Dioli, Irene <1980>
author_sort Dioli, Irene <1980>
title Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia
title_short Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia
title_full Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia
title_fullStr Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia
title_full_unstemmed Labour, LGBT* rights, and Europe. Discourses in Italy and Serbia
title_sort labour, lgbt* rights, and europe. discourses in italy and serbia
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2013
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/5995/
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