This paper analyses qualitative data with LGBT young people to explore police-LGBT youth interactions, and the outcomes of these interactions, as pedagogical moments for LGBT young people, police, and public onlookers. Although the data in this paper could be interpreted in line with dominant ways of thinking about LGBT young people and police, as criminalization for instance, the data suggested something more complex. This paper employs a theoretical framework informed by poststructural theories, queer theories, and pedagogical theories, to theorise LGBT youth-police interactions as instruction about managing police relationships in public spaces. The analysis shows how LGBT young people are learning from police encounters about the need to avoid ‘looking queer’ to minimise police harm.
History
Publication title
Sexuality and Culture
Volume
19
Pagination
493-512
ISSN
1095-5143
Department/School
School of Social Sciences
Publisher
Springer New York LLC
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
?Copyright Springer Science+Business Media New York 2015