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Find the facts, figures, and connections you need on the Internet
This powerful reference tool is the most comprehensive, reliable
guide to Internet resources for the LBGTQ community. More than just
a guide to useful Web sites, it also evaluates LGBTQ mailing lists,
message boards, search engines, and portals. The Harvey Milk
Institute Guide to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer
Internet Research provides background information as well as useful
URLs. It covers the history and objectives of major sites. The
in-depth interviews with leaders of the queer Internet include
discussions with Barry Harrison, Director of Queer Arts Resources,
and Sister Mary Elizabeth, founder of AEGiS. The Harvey Milk
Institute Guide to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer
Internet Research includes resources for a variety of academic
disciplines, including: the humanities the social sciences law
labor studies media studies transgender and intersex studies and
more Edited by Alan L. Ellis, co-chair of the institute's board of
directors, The Harvey Milk Institute Guide to Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Internet Research is an
indispensable tool for researchers, community leaders, and
scholars.
"Those of us in our forties and fifties came of age in the 1960s
and 1970s--a time when the available commentary on gay life was
anything but supportive. Until 1973, homosexuality was a
diagnosable mental illness." --from the Introduction by Alan L.
EllisToday, that literary blindness is being remedied. Take an
in-depth look into the lives of 15 gay men and how they relate to
their own aging with Gay Men at Midlife: Age Before Beauty, a
fascinating new book that explores and clarifies the issues that
confront gay men as they age. What happens to gay men's lives when
they reach middle age?The essays in Gay Men at Midlife: Age Before
Beauty offer a realistic picture of both the challenges and the
joys that present themselves in the lives of gay men at midlife.
The book does not gloss over the difficulties of the experience;
you will truly come to understand that each gay man is not alone in
confronting the pain and mourning that may accompany middle age.The
people who frankly, openly, and intelligently discuss their
personal lives in Gay Men at Midlife: Age Before Beauty include:
psychotherapist/popular columnist Tom Moon (San Francisco,
California) professor of philosophy and literature Alejandro
Medina-Bermudez (Madrid, Spain) television executive George Pierson
(Bethesda, Maryland) multimedia artist Trevor Southey (born in the
country now known as Zimbabwe, currently working in San Francisco)
activist/researcher Frank Wong (New York) . . . plus 10 more
individuals from varying backgrounds Gay Men at Midlife: Age Before
Beauty provides a look at how these individuals are redefining the
stereotypes of aging gay men and empowering themselves to find
meaning and purpose in the second half of their lives.
Sexual Identity on the Job provides academics and practitioners
with a solid resource for addressing sexual identity concerns and
issues in the workplace. It offers corporate trainers, managers,
and policymakers suggestions for creating a positive psychological
environment of inclusion for all workers through policies of
nondiscrimination, the availability of domestic partner benefits,
and solid efforts to eliminate on-the-job discrimination toward
lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgender individuals. It educates
social service providers about company actions of which they need
to know in order to effectively support their gay, lesbian,
bisexual, and transgenderedclients.As a compilation of scholarly
and applied perspectives, Sexual Identity on the Job covers such
topics as multicultural identity (multiple identities) development;
legal and policy issues of employment; career development issues
for lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and transgender persons; and how
inclusion improves productivity among all groups. By including both
perspectives, this unique volume offers both academics and
practitioners a broader knowledge of the field and relevant issues,
and possible solutions for sexual identity concerns and questions
in the workplace.Chapters in Sexual Identity on the Job address a
diverse set of issues relating to ways in which those concerned
about the psychological well-being of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and
transgender workers can address their needs while recognizing their
desire to lead productive, fulfilling lives. The contributors, in
promoting workplaces that offer all workers inclusion, safety, and
a place to thrive psychologically and emotionally, cover such
topics as: gay, lesbian, and bisexual career development and
counseling issues managing multiple identities (race, gender,
sexual orientation) in the workplace current trends in economic
discrimination toward lesbians, gay men, and bisexuals and relevant
legal concerns domestic partner benefits the relationship between
inclusion and productivitySexual Identity on the Job chronicles the
development of research, specific concerns which have been
addressed, and where current research leaves this situation. It
also provides some interpretation of the past and current research
and its implications for lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and
transgender workers and their co-workers. It betters relationships
among gay and straight workers, administration, and management by
promoting equal and fair treatment, in regard to both legal and
policy issues and in interpersonal relationships, to all employees.
Corporate trainers of all levels, academic researchers, career and
other counselors, and the general public will find its pages filled
with applicable and helpful information.
Sexual Identity on the Job provides academics and practitioners
with a solid resource for addressing sexual identity concerns and
issues in the workplace. It offers corporate trainers, managers,
and policymakers suggestions for creating a positive psychological
environment of inclusion for all workers through policies of
nondiscrimination, the availability of domestic partner benefits,
and solid efforts to eliminate on-the-job discrimination toward
lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgender individuals. It educates
social service providers about company actions of which they need
to know in order to effectively support their gay, lesbian,
bisexual, and transgenderedclients.As a compilation of scholarly
and applied perspectives, Sexual Identity on the Job covers such
topics as multicultural identity (multiple identities) development;
legal and policy issues of employment; career development issues
for lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and transgender persons; and how
inclusion improves productivity among all groups. By including both
perspectives, this unique volume offers both academics and
practitioners a broader knowledge of the field and relevant issues,
and possible solutions for sexual identity concerns and questions
in the workplace.Chapters in Sexual Identity on the Job address a
diverse set of issues relating to ways in which those concerned
about the psychological well-being of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and
transgender workers can address their needs while recognizing their
desire to lead productive, fulfilling lives. The contributors, in
promoting workplaces that offer all workers inclusion, safety, and
a place to thrive psychologically and emotionally, cover such
topics as: gay, lesbian, and bisexual career development and
counseling issues managing multiple identities (race, gender,
sexual orientation) in the workplace current trends in economic
discrimination toward lesbians, gay men, and bisexuals and relevant
legal concerns domestic partner benefits the relationship between
inclusion and productivitySexual Identity on the Job chronicles the
development of research, specific concerns which have been
addressed, and where current research leaves this situation. It
also provides some interpretation of the past and current research
and its implications for lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and
transgender workers and their co-workers. It betters relationships
among gay and straight workers, administration, and management by
promoting equal and fair treatment, in regard to both legal and
policy issues and in interpersonal relationships, to all employees.
Corporate trainers of all levels, academic researchers, career and
other counselors, and the general public will find its pages filled
with applicable and helpful information.
Find the facts, figures, and connections you need on the Internet
This powerful reference tool is the most comprehensive, reliable
guide to Internet resources for the LBGTQ community. More than just
a guide to useful Web sites, it also evaluates LGBTQ mailing lists,
message boards, search engines, and portals. The Harvey Milk
Institute Guide to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer
Internet Research provides background information as well as useful
URLs. It covers the history and objectives of major sites. The
in-depth interviews with leaders of the queer Internet include
discussions with Barry Harrison, Director of Queer Arts Resources,
and Sister Mary Elizabeth, founder of AEGiS. The Harvey Milk
Institute Guide to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer
Internet Research includes resources for a variety of academic
disciplines, including: the humanities the social sciences law
labor studies media studies transgender and intersex studies and
more Edited by Alan L. Ellis, co-chair of the institute's board of
directors, The Harvey Milk Institute Guide to Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Internet Research is an
indispensable tool for researchers, community leaders, and
scholars.
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