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Clare Cahill
The Scholars Index represents either LGBTQ identified or
LGBTQ friendly scholars doing work in Queer Theory, Gender
Studies, LGBT Studies Women's Studies, Feminist Studies and
related fields. |
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Biography
I am a PhD candidate in Criminology at the
University of Melbourne, and am (as far as I know) socially,
genetically and chromosomally "female". My academic
interests are informed by the forms and processes of social
control, the politics of identity and the construction of consent
in contemporary social and political institutions.
I live in Melbourne, Australia, with my partner who is also a
criminologist, and together we are raising an Alaskan Malamute,
and caring for three cats.
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Organizations & Institutions
University of Melbourne, Australia
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Fields of Study
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Published and
Unpublished Works
Cahill, C (2000) "Legacies of Feminism:
Gender and Social Control" Unpublished Lecture delivered at
University of Melbourne
Cahill, C and Somers, C XXY (1999) "Whatever Happened to Baby
John? An examination of the "management" of intersexed
children/adolescents and the uncertainty of legal gender"
Unpublished conference paper presented at ANZ Society of
Criminology conference
Cahill, C (1998) "Doubly Deviant: Gender/ed Deviance and the
Transgendered Offender" Unpublished conference paper
presented at Third International Congress on Sex and Gender
Cahill, C (1998) "Sean, Nancy and Birdie Jo: contested
convictions of gender" in Journal
of Gender Studies (Transgender edition) Vol 7 No 3,
November 1998
Cahill, C (1997) "Why queer theory is important to
criminology" Unpublished paper presented at American Society
of Criminology
Cahill, C and Tait, D (1997) Mutilated Genitals: Narratives of
Circumcision, Cutting Rituals, and Identity. Unpublished
conference paper presented at ANZ Society of Criminology
conference
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Current Projects
I am currently completing my PhD in Criminology
at the University of Melbourne. My thesis research examines the
ways in which gender and gender transgressions, as they are
exposed and reflected by the experiences of transgendered people
and differently gendered people, are constructed, regulated and
controlled in everyday life.
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