An novative, data-driven explanatn of how public opn shifted on LGBTQ rights The Path to Gay Rights is the first social science analysis of how and why the LGBTQ movement achieved s most unexpected victory—transformg gay people om a spised group of social viants to a mory worthy of rights and protectns the ey of most Amerins. The book weav together a narrative of LGBTQ history wh new fdgs om the field of polil psychology to provi an unrstandg of how social movements affect mass attus the Uned Stat and globally. Usg data gog back to the 1970s, the book argu that the current unrstandg of how social movements change mass opn—through sympathetic media verage and endorsements om polil lears—nnot provi an aquate explanatn for the phenomenal succs of the LGBTQ movement at changg the public’s views. In The Path to Gay Rights, Jeremiah Garretson argu that the LGBTQ muny’s rponse to the AIDS crisis was a turng pot for public support of gay rights. ACT-UP and related AIDS anizatns strategilly targeted polil and media lears, normalizg news verage of LGBTQ issu and AIDS and signaled to LGBTQ people across the Uned Stat that their liv were valued. The rult was an crease the number of LGBTQ people who me out and lived their liv openly, and wh creased ntact wh gay people, public attus began to warm and change. Garretson go beyond the story of LGBTQ rights to velop an evince-based argument for how social movements n alter mass opn on any ntent topic.
Contents:
THE PATH TO GAY RIGHTS: HOW ACTIVISM AND COMG OUT CHANGED PUBLIC OPN
Read the latt Review of the Week, The Path to Gay Rights: How Activism and Comg Out Changed Public Opn om NYU Prs. * the path gay *
In s sophomore slump, The Path seems to have fotten why wanted to believe the first one benefed om the obligatn of troducg Meyerism and s believers, based on pounds Pe, San Diego, and upstate New York. The Path to Gay Rights: How Activism and Comg Out Changed Public OpnAn novative, data-driven explanatn of how public opn shifted on LGBTQ rightsThe Path to Gay Rights is the first social science analysis of how and why the LGBTQ movement achieved s most unexpected victory―transformg gay people om a spised group of social viants to a mory worthy of rights and protectns the ey of most Amerins.
The rult was an crease the number of LGBTQ people who me out and lived their liv openly, and wh creased ntact wh gay people, public attus began to warm and change.
GenrLGBTHistoryNonfictn352 pag, HardverPublished June 5, 2018About the thorRatgs & ReviewsFriends & Followg Communy ReviewsDisplayg 1 - 2 of 2 reviews184 reviewsShelved as 'dnf'Febary 16, 2022i’m sorry but i jt n’t waste my ltle time on this earth readg bad non fictn books about gay rights history that ll the entire lgbtq+ muny ‘gays and lbians’. It mak a signifint ntributn to the polil science lerature on LGBT studi by synthizg and advancg the empiril arguments on the shift opn on gay rights jt a few generatns. Support for gay rights has followed a different trajectory than support for any other mory groups rights, buildg more slowly but acceleratg more The Path to Gay Rights, Garretson has pellgly told the story that explas whya remarkable piece of Huddy, Co-Edor of The Oxford Handbook of Polil Psychology, Send Edn:The Path to Gay Rights exam why and how public support for gays and lbians creased markedly recent s.
THE PATH TO GAY RIGHTS
* the path gay *
Garretson explor the origs of this unually rapid shift public opn, tracg back to Amerins creased ntact wh gay and lbian dividuals both directly and virtually through TV book provis a rich and layered acunt of events, activism, tert group activy, and polil mpaigns amplified by reful analysis of survey data, onle search, and Congrsnal vot.
It mak a signifint ntributn to the polil science lerature on LGBT studi by synthizg and advancg the empiril arguments on the shift opn on gay rights jt a few fe study exam how the change public opn took place over the years while lookg at the ultimate of social change important addn to the LGBTQ book's narrative is hopeful's a story of how untls personal teractns and dividual chang of heart, not ele opn or legal mandat, drove one of the most remarkable attudal shifts morn history. While laws agast sodomy, seldom enforced, were mon om the lonial perd, the velopment of the medil and mental health profsns the late 1800s and early 1900s provid a new, “ratnal” basis for the existence of anti-homosexualy statut. 8 Acrdg to Canaday, “Progrsive era reformers ed the word homosexualy somewhat terchangeably wh ‘pervert’, ‘generate’, ‘perast’, and ‘sodome’ their mpaigns to improve public health.
An novative, data-driven explanatn of how public opn shifted on LGBTQ rights The Path to Gay Rights is the first social science analysis of how and w... * the path gay *
As new medil notns of the homosexual as a distct type of person started to take root the public md, they beme nnected to prev notns of homosexualy as sful and immoral. Although many the medil profsn believed homosexuals were ill and th need of treatment, not sners need of punishment, the majory of the public me to believe that a whole class of dividuals who were herently generate or immoral existed. Over the urse of the first half of the twentieth century, a progrsively more tense fashn, homosexuals beme more and more exclud om ernment programs orr to make sure that those benefg om the programs were not generat.
Eric Bach is an openly gay broadster for the Frericksburg Natnals. He has major league aspiratns, but his path has been much lonelier than he would prefer. * the path gay *
Homosexuals were banned om legal immigratn for havg “immoral purpos, ” screened om the armed servic durg the end of World War I and all of World War II for reasons of beg unf (though many lied orr to enlist), ejected om New Deal relief programs for fear that imprsnable others would learn “perversn, ” and later nied earned benefs unr the G. In effect, then, the two perceived threats, a munist threat to the natn and a homosexual threat to the health of the tradnal fay, started to blend together durg this perd. That did not stop other high-rankg admistratn officials om attemptg a plete purge of homosexuals om the civil service orr to fight back agast accatns om polil opponents of “subversiv” beg employed by the feral ernment.
Republins attempted to ga the upper hand after accg the Democrats of beg lax on homosexualy, when Print Eisenhower issued executive orr 10450 upon takg office 1953.