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 SM Rodriguez

SM Rodriguez

Assistant Professor of Gender, Rights and Human Rights

Department of Gender Studies

Room No
PAN.11.01
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Languages
English, Spanish
Key Expertise
Anticarceral Feminism, Social Justice, Africana Studies, Sexual Politics

About me

Dr. S.M. Rodriguez is scholar-activist and Assistant Professor of Gender, Rights and Human Rights. Their research advances the understanding of the impact of racialisation, criminalisation, ableism, and the imposition of gendered and sexual control on people of African descent. With a monograph and over a dozen journal articles and book chapters, Dr. Rodriguez’s work has had a profound impact on scholarship, legal proceedings, and organizational practices.

In their first monograph, The Economies of Queer Inclusion: Transnational Organizing for LGBTI Rights in Uganda (2019), Dr Rodriguez analysed the effects of transnational advocacy on Ugandan LGBTI (kuchu) organising during the four-year period in which the Ugandan government considered the “Kill the Gays Bill”. The work used interviews, ethnography, and an analysis of fourteen years of Ugandan parliamentary records to examine the complicated impact of transnational financing on antigay ideologies, gay rights movement-making, and legislating morality. 

Dr. Rodriguez’s current research centres two tracks. The first explores the globalisation of abolitionist feminist praxis. They are currently writing a monograph that explores the intersections of anti-slavery, anti-imperial, and anti-violence movements across Africa, the Caribbean, and their diasporas in the US and UK. In another research track, Dr Rodriguez examines the political processes involved in or countering gender and sexual identification. Work in this area includes the Nonbinary Identity Project and collaborations that address the relationship between surveillance, regulation, and gender expansive identity formation.

In addition to their research endeavours, Dr Rodriguez has launched two major initiatives: Black Queer Movements, the global knowledge-exchange hub for LGBTIQ activists of African descent, and a UK higher education racial equity project, called The Black Professors Pipeline.

Research Member of the Mannheim Centre for Criminology

Member of the PhD Supervisory team of Ting-Sian Liu.

Expertise Details

Transnational Social Movements; Penal Abolition; Sexual Politics; Queer Theory; Crip of Color Critique; Disability Justice; Human Rights; State Violence; Transformative Justice

Publications

Books:

Forthcoming - Abolition in the Academy: Scholar-Activists in the Global Movement for Penal Abolition

(2019)

 The Anti-Homosexuality (dubbed “Kill the Gays”) Bill of 2009 propelled Uganda to the forefront of global media. In its initial manifestation, the Bill threatened to penalize “aggravated homosexuality” with the death penalty. The media attention earned by the proposed legislation opened avenues for transnational cooperation and communication between US-based Human and LGBTI Rights organizations and kuchu (or LGBTI) Ugandans. The Economies of Queer Inclusion focuses on this transnational relationship and the complications that arise when international currency and professionalization transform grassroots organizing.

This book excavates how transnational advocacy, which aims to empower LGBTI rights activism, actually restructures and, in some cases, limits local movements. With interview and ethnographic data with activists in Kampala, Uganda and New York City, the research highlights how the introduction of international attention and funding causes organizations to restructure their movement goals and strategies in order to best attract desired partners. The funder-funded relationship causes both local discord and transnational divestment from alternative forms of organizing.

  • American Sociological Association Sexualities Section Distinguished Book Award, Honorable Mention.

(2014)

Featuring a variety of readings, this interdisciplinary anthology addresses such key questions as: How are sexualities socially constructed? Why are sexualities more than just natural "urges" or "drives"? and How are sexualities personal, social, and political? Sexualities: Identities, Behaviors, and Society, Second Edition, focuses on gender, using multiple disciplines, international populations, and theories to explore sexualities. The book was equally co-edited by the Stony Brook Sexualities Research Group of which SM Rodriguez was a member. 

Journal Articles:

2023 African Feminisms for Abolitionist Futures: Archival Hauntings in a Speculative Geography. Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity

2023 Forging Black Safety in the Carceral Diaspora: Perverse Criminalization, Sexual Corrections and Connection-Making in a Death World. Social Justice (Forthcoming, Accepted)

2023 Caring in the Classroom: The Hidden Toll of Emotional Labor of Abolitionist Scholar-Activism. Contemporary Justice Review

2023 Depathologization as Healing Justice. Co-authored with Liat Ben-Moshe, Kennedy Healy and H Rakes. QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking 

2022 Black Dreams, Electric Mirror: Cross-Cultural Teaching of State Terrorism and Legitimized Violence. Teaching Sociology 50(4): 1-7.

2022 Queers Against Corrective Development: LGBTSTGNC Anti-Violence Organizing in Gentrifying Times. GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 28(2): 165-184.

Journal Editor 2022    racialization.spectacle.liberation. A Special Issue of Wagadu: A Journal of Transnational Women’s and Gender Studies. Co-Edited with Chriss Sneed

2020    Carceral Protectionism and the Perpetually (In)Vulnerable. Co-Authored with Liat Ben-Moshe and H Rakes, Criminology and Criminal Justice, 20(5):537-550.

2018    Challenging Perspectives on Street-Based Sex Work. Contemporary Sociology, 47(6): 715-717.

2017    Homophobic Nationalism: The Development of Sodomy Legislation in Uganda. Comparative Sociology, 16(3): 393-421.

Publications in Pipeline

  • Enforcing the “Unnatural Offence”: Sodomy Legislation and Anti-Queer Panoptic Policing in Uganda (journal article, revise and resubmit)

 

Publications in Edited Volumes

2021    Not Behind Bars: The Rippling Effect of Carceral Habitus and Corrective Violence on the Family and Community Life of Prison Guards. Co-Authored with Brittany Clark (Undergraduate Student), in Contesting Carceral Logic: Knowledge and Praxis in Penal Abolition. Michael Coyle and Mechthild Nagel (eds). London: Routledge.

2021    Queer Abolitionist Alternatives to Criminalising Hate Violence. The Routledge International Handbook on Penal Abolition. Michael Coyle and David Scott (eds). London: Routledge

2021    LGBT Identity, Race and Justice. Race, Crime and Justice: An Encyclopedia of the American Mosaic. Delores Jones-Brown and Christine Barrow (eds.). Greenwood Publishing, Santa Barbara. 

2020    LGBTIQ Rights in Africa. Co-Authored with Marc Epprecht and S.N. Nyeck. Understanding Contemporary Africa (6th ed). Lynne Rienner Publishers. Peter J. Schraeder (ed).

2020    Invisibility Matters: Queer African Organizing and Visibility Management in a Transnational Age. Feminist and Queer Theory: An Intersectional and Transnational Reader. Barbara Shaw and L. Ayu Saraswati (eds). Oxford University Press

2020    On Freddie Gray. The Encyclopedia of Racial Violence. Sowande Mustakeem and Douglas Flowe (eds). ABC-CLIO Publishing. ISBN: 9781440852428

 

Other Publications

2022    Against the Colonial Carceral Diaspora .

2021    International Sociological Association, Global Dialogue, 11(1).

2020    The Thorned Roses of Uganda’s Stella Nyanzi.

Teaching

SM is on leave during the Autumn Term 2024-25

SM is the director for the MSc Gender (Rights and Human Rights) programme