Dear section members, We hope you are having a lovely summer and are looking forward to seeing you at the Virtual Meeting very soon. Below please find important announcements for the Sexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities Division of SSSP. I. Annual Business Meeting Ð Friday July 16th 1 II. SBPC Graduate Paper Competition Winner 1 III. Annual Virtual Meeting Registration & Program 2 IV. Member Publications 5 V. Job Announcements 6 Annual Business Meeting Ð Friday July 16th The annual business meeting for the Sexual Behavior, Politics and Communities division is tomorrow, July 16, from 2:00-4:00 pm ET. The agenda is linked here. The meeting will be held over Microsoft Teams: Join on your computer or mobile app Click here to join the meeting Or call in (audio only) +1 470-705-2566,,550901233#ÊÊ United States, Atlanta Phone Conference ID:Ê550 901 233# Find a local numberÊ|ÊReset PIN Learn MoreÊ|ÊHelpÊ|ÊMeeting options SBPC Graduate Paper Competition Winner: Jess Goldstein-Kral Congratulations to the SBPC Graduate Student Paper competition winner, Jess Goldstein-Kral, for their paper ÒSex on the Streets and in the Margins: Homelessness, Sexual Citizenship and Justice.Ó Jess will be presenting this paper during the ÒTranslating Health Care Research into ActionÓ Session, sponsored by Health, Health Policy, and Health Services, on Thursday August 5th at 1:30 pm during the Virtual Annual Meeting. Annual Virtual Meeting: Registration & Program The 71st Virtual Annual Meeting will be held August 4-7, 2021. If you have not yet done so, you can register for the meeting here, and check out the preliminary program here. Be sure to check out our division sessions: Session 011:ÊCRITICAL DIALOGUE: Sexual Violence, Power, and Justice Date:ÊWednesday, August 4, 11:30 AM - 1:15 PM Sponsors:ÊCrime and Juvenile Delinquency; Gender; Sexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities Organizers:ÊJamie L. Small, University of Dayton; Rafia Javaid Mallick, University of Oklahoma Presider/Discussant:ÊHeather Hlavka, Marquette University Description:Ê This critical dialogue will investigate sexual violence, mechanisms of power, and access to justice, broadly conceptualized. Since the #MeToo movement, sexual violence has received renewed public recognition, but it remains under-theorized in the discipline of sociology. The papers focus on both empirical patterns of sexual violence as well as the cultural meanings that frame the issue. They also take up intersectional approaches, attuned to the ways that social difference shapes sexual victimization and perpetration. The dialogue will move toward considerations of harm mitigation, ethical representation, and justice for survivors. Papers: ÒComplicating Clery: Title IX CoordinatorsÕ Perspectives on Campus Sexual Violence Reporting and the Limits of Institutional Transparency,Ó AshleyÊC.ÊRondini, Franklin & Marshall College ÒDoes Age Matter? Public Perception of Rape against Women in China,Ó YaÊSu, University of Notre Dame and MinjuÊKwon, Chapman University ÒGender, Culture, Power and Child Sexual Abuse: Exploring the Role of Mothers in Homes Where Girl-child Sexual Abuse Occurs in Jamaica,Ó PatriciaÊB.ÊWatson, University of Missouri ÒGendered Risk Regimes: Centering the Study of Violence in Organizations,Ó NonaÊMariaÊGronert, University of Wisconsin-Madison ÒQueer Male SurvivorsÕ Constructions of Hierarchies of Victimhood,Ó DougÊMeyer, University of Virginia ÒThe ÔLotteryÕ of Rape Reporting: Secondary Victimization and Swedish Criminal Justice Professionals,Ó CaitlinÊP.ÊCarroll, The University of Texas at Austin, Winner of the Crime and Juvenile Delinquency DivisionÕs Student Paper Competition Session 020:ÊQueer Communities, Space, and Identities Date:ÊWednesday, August 4, 1:30 PM - 3:15 PM Sponsor:ÊSexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities Organizer:ÊRafia Javaid Mallick, University of Oklahoma Presider & Discussant:ÊMelissa Maxey, University of Oklahoma Description:Ê This session will discuss what does it mean to be part of the 'Queer community' and their experiences. The papers will focus on the ideas related to community 'belongingness', 'difference', and 'diversity'; the importance of physical and online spaces, and the role they play in the wellbeing of the community. They can also explore the ritual symbolism of the spaces and the consequences attached to them. The discussion will move toward the interrelation of identities, spaces, and communities; exploring the implications of ritualism and symbolism. Papers: ÒMaking Public Sex a Social Problem: News Coverage of Public Sex in Cincinnati, 1960-2021,Ó KyleÊShupe, University of Cincinnati ÒLes Meet Up: LGBTQ+ WomenÕs Use of Meetup Groups as Community Building,Ó AshleyÊM.ÊGreen, University of South Florida ÒLove and Capitalism: Love Lock Bridges and the Definition of the Situation,Ó JoshuaÊAnthonyÊReyna, The University of Texas at San Antonio and RamiroÊGarcia-Villarreal, Independent Scholar ÒEducator Perceptions of Gendered Risks Related to Cyberbullying and Online Aggression,Ó MichaelÊAdorjan, University of Calgary and RosemaryÊRicciardelli, Memorial University of Newfoundland Session 034:ÊGender, Sexuality, and the Law Date:ÊThursday, August 5, 9:30 AM - 11:15 AM Sponsors:ÊLaw and Society; Sexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities Organizer & Presider:ÊLloyd Klein, LaGuardia Community College Description:Ê This session examines the relationship between gender and the law. Various legal perspectives will be discussed through consideration of gender disparities and perspectives as understood through criminal justice responses. Paper topics include autopsies and gender-based disparities, a longitudinal study of gender polarization, maternal filicide, FOSTA, and child sexual abuse prosecutions. Papers: ÒGender Disparities in Autopsies Involving Suspicious Deaths: The Role of Perceived Gender-based Vulnerability,Ó StephenÊJ.ÊMorewitz, San Jose State University ÒUnpacking Gender Polarization: Dynamics of State Partisanship and WomenÕs Political Representation, 1975-2019,Ó MorganÊC.ÊMatthews, University of Wisconsin-Madison ÒCriminal Justice Responses to Maternal Filicide: Judging the Failed Mother,Ó EmmaÊMilne, Durham University ÒÔYou Have to Love PainÕ: How Child Sexual Abuse Prosecutions Shaped a Tough on Crime Era,Ó JamieÊL.ÊSmall, University of Dayton ÒSeeking and Surveilled: The Effects of FOSTA on Sugar BabiesÕ Tumblr Activities,Ó RachelÊE.ÊDavis, University of Kentucky Session 064:ÊQueer, Trans*, and Gender(ed) Lived Realities Date:ÊFriday, August 6, 9:30 AM - 11:15 AM Sponsors:ÊGender Sexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities Organizer, Presider & Discussant:ÊAshley M. Green, University of South Florida Description:Ê Incorporating an intersectional analysis, the papers in this session focus on LGBTQ+ experiences of embodiment. The panelists do so by utilizing a variety of methods to examine the lived realities of aging, body weight, interactions with medical providers, and institutionalized practices within healthcare systems. Papers: ÒCoercion and Heterosexual Rituals in Medicine,Ó BerthaÊA.ÊBen Khallouq, University of Central Florida ÒDoes Racial Homophily Increase Body Weight? Evidence from Sexual Minorities,Ó PhilipÊJ.ÊPettis, Vanderbilt University ÒHarnessing Progress: Constructing Aging as a Process of Growth and Improvement in Midlife,Ó HarryÊN.ÊBarbee, Vanderbilt University ÒThe Limits of Charity in Creating Trans Care: Inequalities in GoFundMe Top Surgery Campaigns,Ó HaydenÊJ.ÊFulton, University of South Florida Session 090:ÊCRITICAL DIALOGUE: Sexualities on the Edge Date:ÊFriday, August 6, 3:30 PM - 5:15 PM Sponsor:ÊSexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities Organizer & Presider/Discussant:ÊKathleen Asbury, Community College of Philadelphia Description:Ê This session features cutting edge research by researchers who challenge our thinking. This year presentersÕ work will increase our global presence and analysis through their current research.ÊPlease join us! Papers: ÒThe Missing Practice of Sexual Health Care,Ó PatriciaÊM.ÊBarrett and WendyÊSimonds, Georgia State University ÒSex on the Streets and in the Margins: Homelessness, Sexual Citizenship, and Justice,Ó JessÊGoldstein-Kral and JamieÊO'Quinn, The University of Texas at Austin, Winner of the Sexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities DivisionÕs Student Paper Competition ÒComplicating the Sex Worker Victim-criminal Identity: The Nonprofit Industrial Complex, Carceral Humanitarianism, and Black Feminism as Intervention,Ó VeronicaÊShepp, University of Illinois at Chicago Session 121:ÊGender, Sexuality, and the Law II Date:ÊSaturday, August 7, 3:30 PM - 5:15 PM Sponsors:ÊLaw and Society; Sexual Behavior, Politics, and Communities Organizer & Presider:ÊLloyd Klein, LaGuardia Community College Description:Ê This session focuses on the impact of criminal justice policy through the consideration of Title IX protections along with several papers on children and womenÕs rights. Paper topics include examinations of Title IX from the perspective of trans exclusionary language and sexual violence silence along with several other presentations devoted to best interests of the child, trans healthcare for minors, and transnational human rights framework against sexual violence in South Korea. Papers: ÒAn Analysis of Title IX Policy and Trans Exclusionary Language,Ó HannahÊLiebreich, Furman University ÒNeutralizing Institutional Risk: A Case Study of Title IX Confusion & Sexual Violence Silence,Ó LaraÊH.ÊJanson, University of Chicago ÒInterrogating the Imagined Futurities of Bans on Trans Healthcare for Minors,Ó RubenÊD.ÊCaginalp, Fordham University ÒA Whole Village: Polyamorous Families and the Best Interests of the Child Standard,Ó KimberlyÊRhoten, Boston University, ElisabethÊA.ÊSheff, Sheff Consulting and University of Tennessee and JonathanÊLane, JD Lane Law ÒWomenÕs Rights Are Human Rights: ActivistsÕ Implementation of the Transnational Human Rights Framework Against Sexual Violence in South Korea,Ó LauraÊL.ÊBecker, University of Hawai?i at M?noa Member Publications Barcelos, Chris. 2020.ÊDistributing Condoms and Hope: The Racialized Politics of Youth Sexual Health. University of California Press. Daniel, Meghan. ÒThe Social Movement for Reproductive Justice: Emergence, Intersectional Strategies, and Theory Building.Ó Sociology Compass. Online first: https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12907 Daniel, Meghan and Cedric de Leon. 2020. ÒLeadership and Sequencing in Intersectional Mobilization: An Analysis of the Chicago Abortion Fund, 1985-2015.Ó Mobilization: An International Quarterly 24(4): 461-474. Jackson, Monisha Issano. 2020. ÒWhat are the demands of ÔdecolonisingÕ UK universities?ÓÊ https://link.medium.com/ZYqXfRgH9fb.Ê Levitt, L. (2020).ÊHunger gamesÊand the dystopian imagination. In Jenkins, H., Peters-Lazaro, G., & Shresthova, S. (Eds.),ÊPopular culture and the civic imagination: Case studies of creative social change. NYU Press. Levitt, L. (2021). Restricting/sharing knowledge: The moral economy of sex workersÕ information sharing practices.ÊSpectator 41(1). (forthcoming) Levitt, L. (2021). Sex work/gig work: A feminist analysis of precariousÊdominance labor in the economy. In ÊDolber, B., Kumanyika, C., Rodino-colocino, M., & Wolfson, T. (Eds.),ÊThe gig economy: Workers and media in the age of convergence. Routledge. (forthcoming) Levitt, L. (2020, Nov. 18). Field Notes from a regenerative future.ÊRegenerative Futures.Êhttps://medium.com/regenerative-futures/fieldnotes-from-2060-e358d8a3947b Levitt, L. (2020, Oct. 13). The Sex WorkersÕ Outreach Project Los Angeles holds Vision Quilt workshop for International Day to End Violence against Sex Workers.ÊVQ Blog. Meyer, Doug.ÊÊForthcoming.ÊÊÒRacializing Emasculation: An Intersectional Analysis of Queer MenÕs Evaluations of Sexual Assault.ÓÊÊSocial ProblemsÊ(published online, ahead of print, doi: 10.1093/socpro/spaa053).Ê Ê Meyer, Doug.ÊÊ2020.ÊÊÒÔSo Much for Protect and ServeÕ: Queer Male SurvivorsÕ Perceptions of Negative Police Experiences.ÓÊJournal of Contemporary Criminal JusticeÊ36(2): 228-250.ÊÊ Ê Meyer, Doug.ÊÊ2020.ÊÊÒOmar Mateen as U.S. Citizen, Not Foreign Threat: Homonationalism and LGBTQ Online Representations of the Pulse Nightclub Shooting.ÓÊÊSexualitiesÊ23(3): 249-268.Ê Ê Meyer, Doug.ÊÊ2020.ÊÊÒAn Intersectional Analysis of LGBTQ Online Media Coverage of the Pulse Nightclub Shooting Victims.ÓÊJournal of HomosexualityÊ67(10): 1343-1366. Regan, Hannah. Playboy and Pornification: 65 Years of the Playboy Centerfold.ÊSexuality & CultureÊ25,Ê1058Ð1075 (2021).Êhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s12119-020-09809-2 Zamantakis, Alithia, and Dresden Lackey. 2021. ÒDying to be (A)Gendered: Trans/Nonbinary Experiences of Eating Disorders.ÓÊSociological Inquiry. DOI: 10.1111/soin.12425.Ê Zamantakis, Alithia. 2020.Ê"Queering Intimate Emotions: Trans/Nonbinary People Negotiating Emotional Expectations in Intimate Relationships."Sexualities.Ê Job Announcements Institution: St. Catherine University Department: Dept. of WomenÕs Studies Title: Visiting Professor Link: https://www.nwsa.org/networking/apply_now.aspx?view=2&id=660168 Description: We seek a visionary scholar working at the intersections of gender and critical race studies to help us re-imagine our curriculum and to rethink womenÕs higher education in the 21st century. We are particularly interested in candidates holding interdisciplinary PhDs in WomenÕs Studies and a research and teaching focus on gender/sexuality and Critical Race and/or Ethnic Studies. Institution: Syracuse University Department: Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs Title: Sociology Associate Professor - Gender and Qualitative Methods Link: https://www.sujobopps.com/postings/87128 Description: We seek a sociologist whose research focuses on gender, who does work in the US or internationally, and who uses qualitative methods, including ethnography, in their research. We are particularly interested in a scholar who works on and can teach courses on gender and intersectionality. Institution: University of Minnesota - Duluth Department: Department of Studies in Justice, Culture, & Social Change Title: Tenure-track Assistant Professor of Sociology Description: The Department of Studies in Justice, Culture, and Social Change at the University of Minnesota Duluth invites applications for a tenure-track assistant professor position in Sociology to begin Fall 2022. The Department of Studies in Justice, Culture, and Social Change is a unit of the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences at the University of Minnesota Duluth. The department offers bachelorÕs degrees in Anthropology, Criminology, Sociology, and Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies. The position requires teaching undergraduate courses (in the area of Social Inequality in particular), advising undergraduate students who are majoring in our departmentÕs programs, participating in research/scholarly activities and maintaining an active research agenda, and providing service to the department, college, campus, discipline, and/or to the local community. Essential qualifications include: a Ph.D. in Sociology from an accredited university by the start of the appointment; evidence of successful college teaching experience; evidence of ability to teach Social Inequality courses; and evidence of an active research agenda. Page 1 of 6