Queerantine and Misinformation on Gender Minorities: Effects on Service Accessibility

Authors

  • Konstantinos Argyriou Instituto de Filosofía, CSIC

Keywords:

social exclusion, lockdown, misinformation, health inequalities, gender minorities

Abstract

The covid-19 pandemic has supposed a greater marginalization of sexual and gender minorities. This marginalization has been an effect both of the public management’s prioritization of the epidemiological situation, and of a generalized social backlash attributed to the unprecedented lockdown conditions. Within this framework, and among other vulnerable social collectivities, trans people have seen their testimonies particularly unaddressed and exempt of credibility. Group dynamics of reinforcement of categories, as well as the dissemination of fake news through the Internet and the reactivation of outdated debates on legitimacy within the public sphere, have given rise to a generalized mistrust and polarization. The present text utilizes qualitative data obtained through a larger research project on accessibility of trans people to psychological services, to conflate barriers to health services, with infodemia on social media, social distancing, the uprising of conservative discourses, and minority stress.

Published

2022-05-31

How to Cite

Argyriou, K. (2022). Queerantine and Misinformation on Gender Minorities: Effects on Service Accessibility. Dilemata, (38), 177–192. Retrieved from https://dilemata.net/revista/index.php/dilemata/article/view/412000482

Issue

Section

Truth, Disinformation and Verification: Epistemic and Moral Challenges // Articl