AdamBDuyvendakJKrouwelA (1999) Gay and lesbian movements beyond borders? In: AdamBDuyvendakJKrouwelA (eds) The Global Emergence of Gay and Lesbian Politics. national Imprints of a Worldwide Movement. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, pp. 344–371.
2.
BaioccoRPistellaJSalvatiMet al. (2018) Sports as a risk environment: Homophobia and bullying in a sample of gay and heterosexual men. Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health22(4): 385–411.
3.
BeckUGiddensALashS (1994) Reflexive Modernization: Politics, Tradition and Aesthetics in the Modern Social Order. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
4.
BilićBKajinićS (eds) (2016) Intersectionality and LGBT Activist Politic: Multiple Others in Croatia and Serbia. Cham: Springer.
5.
BrekhusW (2003) Peacocks, Chameleons, Centaurs: Gay Suburbia and the Grammar of Social Identity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
6.
CantúLJ (2009) The Sexuality of Migration: Border Crossing and Mexican Immigrant Men. New York: New York University Press.
7.
CarpenterM (2016) The human rights of intersex people: Addressing harmful practices and rhetoric of change. Reproductive Health Matters24(47): 74–84.
8.
CaudwellJ (2013) ‘Does your boyfriend know you’re here?’ The spatiality of homophobia in men’s football culture in the UK. In: CaudwellJBrowneK (eds) Sexualities, Spaces and Leisure Studies. New York: Routledge, pp. 17–32.
9.
CiszekEL (2017) Activist strategic communication for social change: A transnational case study of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender activism. Journal of Communication67(5): 702–718.
10.
ConnellRCollyerFMaiaJMorrellR (2017) Toward a global sociology of knowledge: Post-colonial realities and intellectual practices. International Sociology32(1): 21–37.
11.
Cornejo SalinasGMartínezJVidal-OrtizS (2018) LGBT studies without LGBT studies: Mapping alternative pathways in Perú and Colombia. Journal of Homosexuality. Epub ahead of print 29October2018. DOI: 10.1080/00918369.2018.1534411
12.
DioliI (2011) From globalization to Europeanization – And then? Transnational influences in lesbian activism of the Western Balkans. Journal of Lesbian Studies15(3): 311–323.
13.
DugganL (1994) Queering the state. Social Text39: 1–14.
European Parliament (1997) Treaty of Amsterdam amending the Treaty on European Union, the Treaties Establishing the European Communities and Certain Related Acts. Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities. Available at: www.europarl.europa.eu/topics/treaty/pdf/amst-en.pdf
16.
GamsonJMoonD (2004) The sociology of sexualities: Queer and beyond. Annual Review of Sociology30: 47–64.
17.
GintyRM (2001) Ethno-national conflict and hate crime. American Behavioral Scientist45(4): 639–653.
18.
GraffA (2010) Looking at pictures of gay men: Political uses of homophobia in contemporary Poland. Public Culture22(3): 583–603.
19.
GriffinP (1992) Changing the game: Homophobia, sexism, and lesbians in sport. Quest44(2): 251–265.
20.
HaritawornJ (2010) Queer injuries: The racial politics of ‘homophobic hate crime’ in Germany. Social Justice37(1): 69–89.
21.
HildebrandtT (2012) Development and division: The effect of transnational linkages and local politics on LGBT activism in China. Journal of Contemporary China21(77): 845–862.
22.
HuntS (2009) Contemporary Christianity and LGBT Sexualities. Farnham: Ashgate.
KeatingC (2013) On the interplay of state homophobia and homoprotectionism. In: BosiaMWeissM (eds) Global Homophobia. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, pp. 246–254.
25.
KinseyACPomeroyWBMartinCE (1948) Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co.
26.
KinseyACPomeroyWBMartinCEGebhardPH (1953) Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co.
27.
KöllenT (ed.) (2016) Sexual Orientation and Transgender Issues in Organizations: Global Perspectives on LGBT Workforce Diversity. Cham: Springer.
28.
KollmanK (2007) Same-sex unions: The globalization of an idea. International Studies51(2): 329–357.
29.
McIntoshM (1968) The homosexual role. Social Problems2(16): 182–192.
30.
MackMA (2017) Sexagon: Muslims, France and the Sexualisation of National Culture. New York: Fordam University Press.
31.
MeadowT (2016) Toward trans* epistemology: Imagining the lives of transgender people. Women’s Studies Quarterly44(3–4): 319–323.
32.
MizieliskaJ (2001) The rest is silence: Polish nationalism and the question of lesbian existence. European Journal of Women’s Studies8(3): 281–297.
33.
MurrayDAB (ed.) (2009) Homophobias: Lust and Loathing across Time and Space. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
34.
NaplesNAMéndezJB (eds) (2014) Border Politics: Social Movements, Collective Identities, and Globalization. New York: NYU Press.
35.
PadillaY (ed.) (2004) Gay and Lesbian Rights Organizing. Community-Based Strategies. Binghamton, NY: Harrington Press.
36.
PanfilVRPetersonD (2014) Handbook of LGBT Communities, Crime, and Justice. Humanities, Social Sciences and Law. Cham: Springer.
37.
PaternotteD (2016) The NGOization of LGBT activism: ILGA-Europe and the Treaty of Amsterdam. Social Movement Studies15(4): 388–402.
38.
PlummerK (1975) Sexual Stigma: An Interactionist Account. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
39.
RadiB (2019) On trans* epistemology: Critiques, contributions, and challenges. TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly6(1): 43–63.
40.
RankinSBlumenfeldWJWeberGNFrazerS (2010) State of Higher Education for LGBT People. Charlotte, NC: Campus Pride.
41.
Serrano-AmayaJF (2004) Queering conflict: The Invisibility of gender and sexual diversity in peace building (Master’s in Conflict Resolution), University of Bradford, Bradford.
42.
SieblerK (2016) Learning Queer Identity in the Digital Age. Cham: Switzerland.
43.
SimonWGagnonJ (1967) Femininity in the lesbian community. Social Problems15: 212–221.
44.
SjobergL (2014) Queering the ‘territorial peace’? Queer Theory conversing with mainstream international relations. The International Studies Review16(4): 608–612.
45.
SlootmaeckersKTouquetHVermeerschP (eds) (2016) The EU Enlargement and Gay Politics: The Impact of Eastern Enlargement on Rights, Activism and Prejudice. Gender and Politics.Cham: Springer.
46.
SmalleyKBWarrenJCBarefootKN (eds) (2018) LGBT Health: Meeting the Needs of Gender and Sexual Minorities. Cham: Springer.
47.
SteinAPlummerK (1996) ‘I can’t even think straight’: ‘Queer’ theory and the missing sexual revolution in sociology. In: SeidmanS (ed.) Queer Theory/Sociology. Cambridge: Blackwell, pp. 129–144.
48.
TaylorVWhittierN (1992) Collective identity in social movement communities: Lesbian feminist mobilization. In: MorrisAMuellerC (eds) Frontiers in Social Movement Theory. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, pp. 104–129.
49.
TomsenS (2009) Violence, Prejudice and Sexuality. New York: Routledge.
50.
TraiesJ (2016) The Lives of Older Lesbians: Sexuality, Identity and the Life Course. Cham: Springer.
WeberS (2015) Daring to marry: Marriage equality activism after Proposition 8 as challenge to the assimilationist/radical binary in queer studies. Journal of Homosexuality62(9): 1147–1173.
54.
WeeksJ (1989) Sex, Politics, and Society: The Regulation of Sexuality since 1800, 2nd edn.London: Longman.
55.
WeissMBosiaM (eds) (2013) Global Homophobia: State, Movements and the Politics of Oppression. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
56.
WellsHPoldersL (2006) Anti-gay hate crimes in South Africa: Prevalence, reporting practices, and experiences of the police. Agenda20(67): 20–28.
57.
WilliamsCLDellingerK (eds) (2010) Gender and Sexuality in the Workplace (Research in the Sociology of Work, Vol.20). Bingley: Emerald.
58.
WindpassingerG (2010) Queering anarchism in post-2001 Buenos Aires. Sexualities13(4): 495–509.