“It’s different for heterosexuals”: exploring cis-heteronormativity in COVID-19 public health directives and its impacts on Canadian gay, bisexual, and queer men

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dc.contributor.author
Daroya, Emerich
Lessard, David
Klassen, Ben
Skakoon-Sparling, Shayna
Sinno, Jad
Adam, Barry
Perez-Brumer, Amaya
Lachowsky, Nathan J.
Sang, Jordan M.
Hart, Trevor A.
Cox, Joseph
Tan, Darrell H. S.
Grace, Daniel
Grey, Cornel
Gaspar, Mark
dc.date.accessioned
2024-07-15T19:39:06Z
dc.date.available
2024-07-15T19:39:06Z
dc.date.issued
2023-06-28
dc.description.abstract - en
Critical scholarship has illustrated how COVID-19 public health policies can enact racism, classism, and cis-heteronormativity, perpetuating harms among vulnerable communities. We sought to examine the accounts of gay, bisexual, and queer men (GBQM) in Canada on how normative ideologies played out in COVID-19 directives and what impacts these orders had on their lives. Two rounds of semi-structured interviews with GBQM in Montreal (n = 30), Toronto (n = 33), and Vancouver (n = 30) were conducted between November 2020-February 2021 and June-October 2021 (N = 93). Our reflexive thematic analysis drew on the frameworks of cis-heteronormativity and intersectionality to examine how normative assumptions about kinship, sociality, and privilege in COVID-19 public health directives were understood and experienced by GBQM. Our participants explicated how cis-heteronormativity was pervasive in COVID-19 public health messaging, noting that stay-at-home orders and limits on social gatherings reinforced heterosexual forms of kinship. The privileging of cis-heteronormative sociality had detrimental effects on the sense of belonging and identity formation of many participants due to restricted access to queer spaces during the pandemic. Others indicated that stay-at-home orders failed to account for the heterogeneity of queer people’s experiences of homelessness and structural racism. These findings provide valuable insights into how public health efforts to control COVID-19 infections have overlooked the complex forms of kinship among GBQM, the importance of queer spaces and community organizations, and the varying vulnerabilities of diverse lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer (LGBTQ+) groups.
dc.identifier.doi
https://doi.org/10.1080/09581596.2023.2226807
dc.identifier.issn
1469-3682
dc.identifier.uri
https://open-science.canada.ca/handle/123456789/2691
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
Informa UK Limited
dc.rights - en
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
dc.rights - fr
Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Pas de modification 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
dc.rights.openaccesslevel - en
Gold
dc.rights.openaccesslevel - fr
Or
dc.rights.uri - en
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.rights.uri - fr
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.fr
dc.subject - en
Health
dc.subject - fr
Santé
dc.subject.en - en
Health
dc.subject.fr - fr
Santé
dc.title - en
“It’s different for heterosexuals”: exploring cis-heteronormativity in COVID-19 public health directives and its impacts on Canadian gay, bisexual, and queer men
dc.type - en
Article
dc.type - fr
Article
local.article.journalissue
5
local.article.journaltitle
Critical Public Health
local.article.journalvolume
33
local.pagination
528-538
local.peerreview - en
Yes
local.peerreview - fr
Oui
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