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Corporate India after Section 377: haphazardness and strategy in LGBTQ diversity and inclusion advocacy

Aaberg, Lars

Corporate India after Section 377: haphazardness and strategy in LGBTQ diversity and inclusion advocacy Thumbnail


Authors

Lars Aaberg



Abstract

It is increasingly common for advocates for LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer) workspace benefits and protections to argue for equitable treatment by utilizing the ‘business case’, or the argument that fostering a diverse and inclusive workspace promotes positive economic outcomes for multinational corporations (MNCs). Utilizing this discourse is particularly important in countries like India, where LGBTQ workers in the private sector have few to no legal protections. As such, a discourse that sutures human rights to business imperatives becomes a primary means of articulating LGBTQ precarity. In this contribution to the ‘Queer Precarities’ themed section, this article seeks to hold in tandem a critical analysis of this arguably neoliberal discourse of LGBTQ precarity with an ethnographic account of ‘following’ the business case into the diverse spacetimes in which it is performed. Drawing from ten-months of fieldwork primarily among MNCs in Bengaluru’s offshore information technologies (IT) industry beginning hours before the Indian Supreme Court read-down the colonial-era anti-sodomy law Section 377, this article describes how corporate organizations responded to the ruling and how these responses, often haphazard and experimental, provided moments for various LGBTQ diversity and inclusion (D&I) advocates to make claims on global capital. In placing criticism of queer liberalism into dialogue with geographic and anthropologic inquiries into globalizing business knowledge and practice, this article argues for moving beyond queer theoretical concerns of normativity to consider moments of maneuver available to actors otherwise unequally incorporated into the global distribution of labor.

Citation

Aaberg, L. (2024). Corporate India after Section 377: haphazardness and strategy in LGBTQ diversity and inclusion advocacy. Gender, Place and Culture, 31(9), 1235-1252. https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369x.2022.2146660

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 15, 2022
Online Publication Date Nov 22, 2022
Publication Date Sep 1, 2024
Deposit Date Dec 5, 2022
Publicly Available Date Dec 5, 2022
Journal Gender, Place and Culture
Print ISSN 0966-369X
Electronic ISSN 1360-0524
Publisher Taylor and Francis Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 31
Issue 9
Pages 1235-1252
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369x.2022.2146660
Keywords Business knowledge, corporations, diversity and inclusion, queer, India
Publisher URL https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0966369X.2022.2146660
Additional Information Data Access Statement : This paper does not have figures.

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