Sexuality, Human Rights, and Public Policy explores the intersection of public policy, human rights, and sexuality as they relate to inclusion and exclusion across diverse cultural settings. It examines how knowledge is formed and experienced at the intersections of culture, sexuality, race, and other axes of identity. The volume engages an array of questions including how public policy shapes the conceptualization of sexuality and rights and by extension the phenomena of inclusion and exclusion in contemporary society across the world. By evaluating how public discourse is employed to re-inscribe differences of gender, sexuality, and rights of citizens, the book provides a comparative analysis of how these processes and dynamics resemble each other or differ cross-culturally. The book demonstrates that in the realm of sexualities, approached from the ideal of human rights as a predominantly Western notion is increasingly challenged by diverse views and new interpretations of human rights in non-Western societies such as Africa and the Middle East.
Contributions by: Luke A. Amadi, Krista Benson, Rachel Bruns, Mary Bunch, Hannah Chukwu, Obinna Innocent Ihunna, Chima J. Korieh, Stepanka Korytova, Paul Martorelli, Erick Monterrosas, Elizabeth O. Onogwu, Sara Riva, Tamar Shirinian, Manfa Sanogo, Toby Strout, Eilís Ward