A Phenomenological Study of Identifying as Lesbian,Gay and Bisexual in an Islamic Country |
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Authors: | Nicholas C. Scull Khadeja Mousa |
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Affiliation: | 1.American University of Kuwait,Salmiya,Kuwait;2.American Center for Psychiatry and Neurology,Dubai,UAE |
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Abstract: | Ten adult Kuwaitis (four women and six men) who self-identified as being gay, lesbian, or bisexual (GLB) participated in in-depth semi-structured interviews examining their experience of being a sexual minority and living in a socially conservative Islamic country. The data were analyzed using interpretive phenomenology and yielded four primary themes including the role of religion and culture, risks, coping, and influential political factors. These themes help understand the ways in which LGB individuals in Kuwait integrate their sexual identity with religious and cultural factors and navigate a socially conservative society. The results of the study have implications for political and social policies in Kuwait, and for more culturally-sensitive models of sexual identity development among Arab populations. |
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