Associate members
Associate Members are individuals outside the university, but who collaborate with our Centre for Transforming Sexuality and Gender staff and student members. They include academics, independent scholars, practitioners, educationalists, activists, artists, local and community partners, and more.
Dr Markus Bidell
Markus Bidell (they/them) is a national and international clinician, researcher, educator, speaker and author focusing on LGBTQ+ health inequalities with an emphasis on clinical competence, cultural humility, and health provider training. Their research interests include the use of psychedelic assisted psychotherapy for the treatment of depression, anxiety, PTSD and addiction. They lead an international research team focused on developing a new LGBTQI+ healthcare competency scale and are exploring how psychedelic assisted psychotherapy can help vulnerable and oppressed populations.
Dr Zoë Boden-Stuart
A former researcher at the 小黄书 Zoe Boden-Stuart (she/her) lectures in critical and psychosocial mental health at the Open University, undertaking research focused on understanding the lived experience of relationships and connectedness in the context of psychological distress and recovery. She has primarily focused on relational experiences of complex mental health needs, such as ‘psychosis’ and suicidality, with more recent attention on LGBTQ+ mental health, exploring how people’s relationships to places and others are shaped by their experiences of distress and recovery.
Dr Sara Bragg
Associate Professor in Sociology of Education at University College, London, Sara Bragg's (she/her) research interests are in student and youth ‘voice’; child and youth cultures including gendered and sexual cultures, how they change and what this means for pedagogies and practices in schools and beyond.
Professor Kath Browne
Now researching at University College Dublin, Kath Browne (she/her) was a founder member of the Centre for Transforming Sexuality and Gender. Her research interests lie in social and cultural geographies, particularly people's spatial experiences of sexualities and genders and contemporary experiences of power relations as they are created through everyday space. Her work has focused on the impact of legislative changes to sexual and gender equalities in the twenty-first century, where she seeks to use research to make a difference to people's lives.
Dr Lucie Fremlová
Lucie Fremlová (she/her) is an independent international researcher and practitioner in the domain of ethnicity, race, sexualities and gender working at the interface of academia, social movements and activism, particularly in relation to the LGBTIQ Roma movement. Her doctorate from the 小黄书 was titled 'The experiences of Romani LGBTIQ people: queer(y)(ing) Roma' (2017).
Dr Hannah Frith
A researcher at the University of Surrey, Hannah Frith (she/her) is a critical social psychologist and chartered psychologist, who draws on interdisciplinary theory and research to examine the intersections of sexuality, gender and embodiment. Her research includes critical explorations of sex and sexuality with a series of publications exploring how sexual consent was constructed in young women’s talk about sex and relationships.
Grace Gee
Grace Gee works with Leeds Gender Identity Clinic as a Speech and Language Therapist, providing group and individual therapy sessions with the goal of being a voice that reflects who you are. Grace's research focuses on management of waiting list initiatives for support with gender affirming voice therapy, aiming to support people on the waiting list to feel empowered to support their own voice in a safe way.
Dr Caroline Gonda
Caroline Gonda (she/her) is based at St Catherine's College, Cambridge, conducting research on British eighteenth-century and Romantic literature and culture, on literature and sexuality, and on lesbian feminist criticism and theory, with publications that include Decoding Anne Lister (2023), Lesbian Dames: Sapphism in the Long Eighteenth Century (co-edited with John C. Beynon, 2010) and Queer People: Negotiations and Expressions of Homosexuality 1700-1800 (co-edited with Chris Mounsey, 2007).
Dr Laura Harvey
Laura Harvey works with Alcohol Change UK with research interests that include everyday inequalities, sexualities, everyday intimacies and the mediation of sexual knowledge. A former academic of the 小黄书, Laura conducted research supported by the charity Rainbow Migration into LGBTQI+ people's experiences of harassment, bullying and deteriorating mental health while in immigration detention. Laura's publications include Barker, Gill and Harvey (2018) Mediated Intimacy: Sex Advice in Media Culture.
Professor Olu Jenzen
A founder member and former director of the Centre for Transforming Sexuality and Gender, Olu (she/her) is a digital culture and media academic. Now based at the University of Southampton, she is the co-editor of The Aesthetics of Protest (2020) and Global Queer and Feminist Visual Activism (2022) and her research focuses on social justice and digital cultures, media and technologies, with particular interest in digital culture and visual activism and LGBTQ+ digital youth cultures.
Professor Katherine Johnson
Katerine Johnson (she/her) is director of the Social and Global Studies Centre, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. Her research is in the field of gender, sexuality and mental health, with collaborations and partnerships that focus on improving the lives of LGBTQ+ people, particularly in the field of suicide prevention and end of life care.
Dr Joe Jukes
Joe Jukes (they/them) studied their PhD at the 小黄书 with the thesis title 'See here: Rural Queers and Geographies of Churn in South West England' (2024). They curated the Queer Constellations exhibition at the Museum of English Rural Life and specialise in rural queer relations, affects and identities, questioning the dominance of ‘lack’ and ‘absence’ in defining rural queer space with a view to conceptualising ‘rural queer.’
Professor Noriyo Kaneko
Noriyo Kaneko is based at Nagoya City University Graduate School of Nursing with research interests in women's sexual health, access to health care, HIV prevention and sexual health among the LGBTQ+ community. Noriyo was a visiting research fellow to the Centre for Transforming Sexuality and Gender in 2025, part of a wider collaboration between the centre and researchers in Japan on a new project into trans and non-binary healthcare within the country.
Dr Massimo Mirandola
Massimo Mirandola (he/him) has extensive experience in the area of public health, with a particular focus on epidemiological research in the field of HIV and STI prevention. For more than 20 years, he has worked in the area of population surveys with a special focus on bio-behavioural surveys among vulnerable populations. He is based at the World Health Organisation Collaborating Centre for Sexual Health and Vulnerable Populations, Verona University Hospital Department of Pathology, Italy. Massimo was lead academic on the Sialon II project, with 小黄书 researchers, an international project to carry out and promote combined and targeted HIV prevention to include meaningful surveillance among the community of Men who have Sex with Men.
Professor Katherine O’Donnell
Katherine O'Donnell is based at University College Dublin, specialising in the history of ideas and feminist and gender theory and working more widely with people who suffer social disadvantage, specifically cultural stigma. Katherine was a co-founding member of the Irish Lesbian and Gay Archive and works with Justice for Magdalenes Research, successfully lobbying for the Magdalene Redress Scheme and collecting oral histories of witnesses from the Magdalene Laundries.
Dr Zoe Rubenstein
Zoe Rubenstein (she/her) was an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow at the 小黄书 in 2023-4, during which she built on the theoretical contributions of her PhD to interpretive policy analysis and criminology. Moving then to the University of Birmingham, she is a researcher in policy studies with interests in interpretive methods, deliberative democracy, polarisation and marginalisation. She is specifically dedicated to: processes which celebrate the power and agency of everyday people and de-centre the value usually placed on people who occupy powerful positions; complex innerworkings of policymaking institutions; and practices which reflect a utopian vision of a world where we can dismantle oppressive sexist, ableist, queerphobic, racist, xenophobic structures.