1. Introduction
PART ONE - COLLECTING QUEER DATA
2. A history of queer data collection
3. Queer data in the Equality Act
4. Queer collection methods
5. Censuses
6. International approaches to queer data collection
SECTION TWO - ANALYSING QUEER DATA
7. Making sense of queer data
8. Intersectional analysis
SECTION THREE - USING QUEER DATA
9. Maintenance of the status quo
10. Your place to speak
11. For political action
12. Conclusion
This important book is the first to look at queer data (defined as data relating to sex, gender, trans identity/ history and sexual orientation), explaining in an engaging and accessible style why it’s important to understand, collect and analyse such data, and the benefits and challenges involved in doing so.
Kevin Guyan is an equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) researcher based in Edinburgh, Scotland. He is currently Head of Knowledge and Research at Advance HE, a higher education agency that works to improve EDI for staff and students in universities and colleges in the UK.
Kevin Guyan’s Queer Data, though not a quick read, is very
comprehensible to an average reader and is absolutely chockablock
with ways to understand how research is conducted and how it
systematically discounts queer people (or counts us incorrectly, or
codes us incorrectly, or…). If you ever do research on anything
involving people—even something as minor as a brand-preference
survey—you must read this, absolutely. But even the lay reader with
no research aspirations will find so many ways to prove that their
homophobic cousin Karen is just plain wrong.
*Xtra Magazine*
[T]he book does an admirable job explaining the finer points behind
the complicated constructs of sexual orientation and gender
identity (SOGI) and drawing attention to nuances that make it
difficult to precisely measure micro-minorities ... the book is a
welcome addition on a topic that currently lacks wide attention.
Guyan poses provocative questions that practitioners should
consider before embarking on research that focuses on sexual and
gender minorities.
*Science Magazine*
An accessible read, Queer Data is a must-read to understand why
reliable data is necessary to ensure the improvement of everyday
LGBTQ+ people, policies, and activist causes.
*One of Gay Times' 10 Most Anticipated Books of 2022*
A brilliant study on how [data is collected] within the LGBTQ
community... enlightening reading.
*Publishing Scotland*
Each of Queer Data’s sections provides thought-provoking debates
and relevant dilemmas grounded in rigorous academic concepts and
rich evidence from practice. In this sense, one of the book’s core
strengths is how it intertwines complex scholarly ideas with
concrete problems that practitioners and activists wrestle within
their day-to-day work.
*Harvard Educational Review*
...Very comprehensible to an average reader and absolutely
chockablock with ways to understand how research is conducted and
how it systematically discounts queer people...If you ever do
research on anything involving people—even something as minor as a
brand-preference survey—you must read this, absolutely. But even
the lay reader with no research aspirations will find so many ways
to prove that their homophobic cousin Karen is just plain
wrong.
*Xtra Magazine*
A refreshingly clear and practical take which cuts through
turbulent discourse and offers a new way of looking at fixing
inequalities and responding to threats facing the LGBTQI+
community.
*Emma Roddick, Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP)*
Committed to the project of changing the world for the better for
Queer People, this book critically analyses the need to include
LGBTQ people in policymaking. It’s enormously readable,
theoretically informed and supported by evidence.
*Julie Fish, Director of the Centre for LGBTQ Research, De Montfort
University, UK*
A unique, powerful call to action. Guyan boldly points out how
queer data is ignored, ‘straightwashed’ or corrupted. It offers a
way forward to engage with queer data to shape our own lived
experiences. Highly recommended!
*Drew Dalton, Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Programme Leader MSc
Inequality and Society, University of Sunderland, UK*
Zooming in on lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer (LGBTQ)
rights, the book illuminates how increased knowledge about queer
identities proves essential as a tool for action, which impacts
decision making related to resource allocation, changes to
legislation, access to services, representation, and
visibility.
*International Feminist Journal of Politics*
This book undeniably deserves a place on your shelf and is a ‘must
have’ for anyone in the academic field.
*Journal of Cultural Analysis and Social Change*
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