Events

Pride amid Prejudice: The Influence of LGBT+ Rights Activism in a Socially Conservative Society

Hosted by the European Institute

Zoom or CBG.2.05

Speaker

Professor Phillip Ayoub

Professor Phillip Ayoub

Chair

Dr Milli Lake

Dr Milli Lake

How do mass publics react to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT+) advocacy efforts in socially conservative societies?

We consider how the first-ever LGBT+ Pride in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina influences ordinary citizens’ attitudes and behavior regarding LGBT+ support. Using nationwide and local panel surveys, we find that support for LGBT+ activism increased locally after the Pride but did not diffuse nationwide, signaling how proximity mechanisms reinforce Pride effects. In survey experiments, we show that subjects are responsive to both mobilization and counter-mobilization appeals by local activists. We also find evidence from a behavioral experiment that the Pride had a positive effect on shifting the allocation of financial resources toward local pro-LGBT+ activists and away from opposition groups. Finally, in-depth interviews with local LGBT+ activists underscore the challenges facing LGBT+ activism in socially conservative societies but also point to the substantial possibilities of collective action on behalf of minorities at risk.

Phillip Ayoub is a Professor of International Relations in the Department of Political Science and School of Public Policy at University College London (UCL). He received his PhD from the Department of Government at Cornell University in 2013. Phillip's research bridges insights from international relations and comparative politics, engaging with literature on transnational politics, sexuality and gender, norm diffusion, and the study of social movements. He is particularly interested in how the transnational mobilization of marginalized peoples and international channels of visibility influence socio-legal change across states.

Milli Lake is an Associate Professor of International Security at the Department of International Relations, LSE.