Reimagining STEM: Queer Navigation, Marginalisation and Resistance in Australian Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Higher Education Spaces
posted on 2025-12-10, 01:12authored byPhilip James Kairns
This study queers STEM spaces through collaborative walking interviews, sensory exploration and performative autoethnography to reveal how technoscientific environments regulate embodiment, affect and power. Mobilising queer theory, intersectional feminism and affect theory, it challenges institutions to move beyond symbolic inclusion toward structural and epistemic transformation. The research shows resistance is generative rather than peripheral, creating openings for alternative ways of inhabiting and reshaping STEM. It positions queer ways of knowing, being and doing as vital to reimagining scientific futures and insists that meaningful transformation in STEM requires attending to the embodied, affective and relational dynamics that shape its everyday life.<p></p>
History
Campus location
Australia
Principal supervisor
Karen Ann Lambert
Additional supervisor 1
lisahunter
Year of Award
2025
Department, School or Centre
School of Curriculum, Teaching and Inclusive Education
Course
Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Type
DOCTORATE
Faculty
Faculty of Education
Rights Statement
The author retains copyright of this thesis. It must only be used for personal non-commercial research, education and study. It must not be used for any other purposes and may not be transmitted or shared with others without prior permission. For further terms use the In Copyright link under the License field.