Research News
The Horizon Europe RESIST study, co-ordinated by University College Dublin, was formally launched today. The project will run for four years and is backed by over 鈧4 million of funding, including support from the European Union, and UK and Swiss governments.
will examine politics that seek to limit gendered freedoms, trans* inclusion, multiculturalism, gender and sexual equality.
Prof. Kath Browne, RESIST project leader and Full Professor at University College Dublin said: 鈥淭his is a big moment for our consortium鈥檚 effort to contest these so-called 鈥榓nti-gender鈥 politics. The RESIST project will explore the consequences these political developments have on lived experiences, freedom of speech, academic freedom, reproductive justice, and gender and sexual diversity in Europe.鈥
RESIST will work with grassroots collectives and organisations in eight countries: Ireland, Spain, Belarus, France, Switzerland, Poland, Germany and Greece 鈥 and will also involve people living in exile across Europe due to 鈥榓nti-gender鈥 politics.
Prof. Browne added: 鈥溾橝nti-gender鈥 movements span the political spectrum and are apparent not only in illiberal and authoritarian regimes but also in democracies considered liberal and inclusive. It is therefore important that we understand how these manifest鈥攁nd also how they are resisted.鈥
Professor Gavan Titley, from the Department of Media Studies in Maynooth University and the Investigator leading on political and media analysis said: 鈥漈he RESIST project will map how 鈥榓nti-gender鈥 politics are expressed, listen to those affected by it, collaborate with organisations countering 鈥榓nti-gender鈥 politics, generate key understandings and tools, and share these with diverse stakeholders and social groups.鈥
The project is co-ordinated by University College Dublin in collaboration with Edinburgh Napier University, European University Viadrina, Universit茅 Paris 1 Panth茅on-Sorbonne, Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Universit茅 de Lausanne, Universit茅 de Fribourg, Maynooth University, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, and Feminist Autonomous Centre for research.
More information about the project on its website: