BEGIN:VCALENDAR
PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260419T081740Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20260911T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20260911T090000
SUMMARY:TransCare 2nd Edition
UID:20260419T092439Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-f5d4878dd-nv7xt
TZID:Europe/Dublin
LOCATION:Cork\, Ireland
DESCRIPTION:<p>Healthcare education and research continue to grapple with the limits of inherited epistemologies: frameworks that have long marginalised\, pathologised\, or erased trans\, gender-diverse\, and intersex lives. Scholarship on&nbsp\;<strong>epistemic injustice</strong>&nbsp\;(Hall 2017\; Wesp et al. 2019) and&nbsp\;<strong>situated knowledges</strong>&nbsp\;(Haraway 1988) shows how these exclusions are embedded in the very processes through which knowledge is produced and legitimised. Insights from gender/sex pluralism (Monro 2005\; 2019\; Preciado 2013) further highlight how institutional systems struggle to&nbsp\;<strong>accommodate the complexity of lived identities</strong>&nbsp\;within and beyond binary frameworks. Transformative inclusion within healthcare settings therefore requires more than updated curricula or revised clinical guidelines: it calls for new methodological imagination (see e.g. Pendleton &amp\; Pezaro 2025).</p>\n<p>This year&rsquo\;s TransCare conference invites&nbsp\;<strong>scholars\, practitioners\, educators\, and community researchers</strong>&nbsp\;to explore how&nbsp\;<strong>creative\, interdisciplinary\, and humanities‑driven methodologies</strong>&nbsp\;can reshape the production of knowledge in healthcare. Building on the 2024 edition&rsquo\;s focus on educational tools\, TransCare turns its attention to the research practices that make such tools possible. We ask how&nbsp\;<strong>arts‑based\, participatory\, speculative\, and community‑led approaches</strong>&nbsp\;can open pedagogical and methodological pathways that affirm gender diversity\, challenge normative assumptions\, and cultivate critical and trans‑affirming pedagogies and research.</p>\n<p>To do so\, we aim to foreground methodology not as a technical procedure but as a site where&nbsp\;<strong>knowledge\, care\, and power intersect</strong>. Approaches that centre&nbsp\;<strong>lived experience\, relationality\, and reflexivity</strong>&nbsp\;can unsettle dominant epistemic frames and generate new possibilities for teaching and practice. Attending to the&nbsp\;<strong>affective and embodied dimensions of research</strong>&nbsp\;and care (Malatino 2020\; 2022) further highlights the need for methodologies that recognise and value ways of knowing and dealing with trans and intersex communities\, particularly in challenging social and political settings.</p>\n<p>The 2026 edition continues TransCare&rsquo\;s commitment to interdisciplinary exchange by emphasising methodology as a site of care\, ethics\, and transformation (Puig de la Bellacasa 2017).&nbsp\;<strong>We welcome contributions that rethink how education and research are designed\, conducted\, interpreted\, and taught\, and that imagine new infrastructures for trans\, gender-diverse\, and intersex&ndash\;inclusive healthcare education.</strong></p>\n<p><strong>&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Scope of Contributions</strong></p>\n<p>We welcome contributions from across disciplines\, sectors\, and methodological traditions. Submissions may address\, but are&nbsp\;<strong>not limited</strong>&nbsp\;to\, the following areas:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Creative\, arts‑based\, and practice‑led research methods in healthcare research and education</strong>&nbsp\;(including performance\, visual methods\, creative writing\, speculative and design‑based approaches)</li>\n<li><strong>Participatory\, community‑led\, and co‑produced research</strong><br>(with trans\, gender‑diverse\, and intersex communities\; peer‑research models\; activist scholarship)</li>\n<li><strong>Methodological innovation in healthcare education</strong><br>(curriculum design\, pedagogical tools\, simulation\, experiential learning\, digital and hybrid teaching)</li>\n<li><strong>Ethics\, care\, and relational methodologies&nbsp\;</strong>(care ethics\, feminist and queer methodologies\, embodied and affective approaches)</li>\n<li><strong>Interdisciplinary and humanities‑driven approaches to healthcare research</strong><br>(critical theory\, philosophy of science\, STS\, medical humanities\, sociology\, anthropology)</li>\n<li><strong>Research addressing institutional\, structural\, and epistemic barriers in the inclusion of trans\, gender-diverse\, intersex and non-binary people&nbsp\;</strong>(epistemic injustice\, gender/sex pluralism\, policy analysis\, organisational change)</li>\n<li><strong>Methodologies for working in challenging social and political contexts&nbsp\;</strong>(hostile policy environments\, safeguarding\, trauma‑informed and resilience‑oriented approaches)</li>\n<li><strong>Innovative approaches to data\, evidence\, and evaluation</strong>&nbsp\;(qualitative\, mixed‑methods\, narrative\, autoethnographic\, and community‑validated forms of evidence)</li>\n</ul>\n<p>We particularly encourage submissions that experiment with form\, challenge disciplinary boundaries\, or propose new infrastructures for trans\, gender‑diverse\, and intersex&ndash\;inclusive healthcare research and education. However\, please do not be intimidated:&nbsp\;<strong>all approaches and levels of experimentation are welcome.</strong></p>\n<p><strong>&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Publication Opportunity</strong></p>\n<p>We are also collecting expressions of interest for a&nbsp\;<strong>collected volume on creative\, interdisciplinary\, and humanities‑driven methodologies for trans\, gender‑diverse\, and intersex&ndash\;inclusive healthcare research and education</strong>.</p>\n<p>If you wish to be considered for inclusion in this edited collection\,&nbsp\;<strong>please indicate this when submitting your abstract by ticking the box in the form.</strong>&nbsp\;<br><br></p>\n<p><strong>List of References</strong></p>\n<p>Hall\, K. Q. (2017). Queer epistemology and epistemic injustice. In I. J. Kidd\, J. Medina\, &amp\; G. Pohlhaus Jr. (Eds.)\,&nbsp\;<em>The Routledge handbook of epistemic injustice</em>&nbsp\;(pp. 158&ndash\;166). Routledge.</p>\n<p>Haraway\, D. (1988). Situated knowledges: The science question in feminism and the privilege of partial perspective.&nbsp\;<em>Feminist Studies\, 14</em>(3)\, 575&ndash\;599.</p>\n<p>Malatino\, H. (2020).&nbsp\;<em>Trans care</em>. University of Minnesota Press.<br>Malatino\, H. (2022).&nbsp\;<em>Side affects: On being trans and feeling bad</em>. University of Minnesota Press.</p>\n<p>Monro\, S. (2005).&nbsp\;<em>Gender politics: Activism\, citizenship and sexual diversity</em>. Pluto Press.</p>\n<p>Monro\, S. (2019). Non-binary and genderqueer: An overview of the field.&nbsp\;<em>International Journal of Transgenderism\, 20</em>(2&ndash\;3)\, 126&ndash\;131.</p>\n<p>Pendleton\, J.\, &amp\; Pezaro\, S. (2025). From midwife to lead perinatal practitioner: A utopian vision.&nbsp\;<em>Birth\, 52</em>(3)\, 511&ndash\;516.</p>\n<p>Preciado\, B. P. (2013).&nbsp\;<em>Testo Junkie: Sex\, drugs\, and biopolitics in the pharmacopornographic era</em>. The Feminist Press.</p>\n<p>Puig de la Bellacasa\, M. (2017).&nbsp\;<em>Matters of care: Speculative ethics in more than human worlds</em>. University of Minnesota Press.</p>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
ORGANIZER;CN=Valeria Venditti:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
