Dean Cooper-Cunningham
20162019

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Short presentation

Dean Cooper-Cunningham is a Ph.D. Fellow at the University of Copenhagen working at the intersections of Feminist and Queer theories, Visual Politics, and Security Studies. He is currently researching the ways that images are used to construct LGBTQ+ individuals as threats to national security and the ways that this construction is resisted by Queer actors. 

His Ph.D. project focuses on the international response to the domestic persecution of Queer individuals in the Russian Federation following the introduction of the 'Gay Propaganda Law' in 2013. It is centres around three political events: (1) the introduction of the homopropaganda law and Pride protests in St. Petersburg (2013); (2) the Sochi Winter Olympics (2014); and (3) the creation and use of 'Gay Clown Putin' memes (2013-present).

His most recent work on visual politics and gender in the British Women's Suffrage Movement has been published in the International Feminist Journal of Politics.

Dean received the Erik Hoffmeyers Travel Grant (50.000kr / €6.500) administered by Danmarks Nationalbank.

Previously, Dean held an editorial position with E-International Relations between 2015-2018 and was shortlisted for the Millennium: Journal of International Studies Northedge Prize in 2017.

Current research

My current research focuses on how gender, sexuality, and international relations intersect. Taking a predominantly visual approach, I explore the articulation of (in)security by means of communicative modes beyond speech. I have developed a tripartite model for analysing the interaction of text-practcice-visual in my most recent article Seeing (In)Security, Gender, and Silencing

My PhD focuses predominantly on the politics LGBTQ+ movements and asks how sexual orientation- and gender- specific (in)securities are constituted by images. 

My Ph.D. project focuses on the articulation of international response to the persecution of LGBTQ+ individuals in the Russian Federation. It is concerned with the ways that Queer bodies have been constructed as dangers to society and politics because of their ‘difference’.

In particular, I look at how images contribute to and dispute this construction of difference as danger, and how the body has been used as a canvas for protest and resistance, through and upon which politics is played out. Specifically, I look at how alternative methods of 'speaking' security are adopted by marginalised individuals, opening up new spaces and direction for security scholarship. 

Ultimately, the PhD project is about understanding how certain bodies are made ‘different’ and dangerous across cultures, societies, and time. It also has a normative value, such that in the process of my research I may be able to identify ways of dialling back these constructions of dangerous difference, which has become increasingly important in light of the greater acceptance of racist, gendered, and queerphobic language of late. 

CV

Education

MSc (Political Science) University of Copenhagen, 2019

M.A. (International Security) University of Sussex, 2017

M.A. Hons (International Relations) University of St Andrews, 2016

Editorial Positions

Editor - Politik (2018-Present)

Commissioning Editor - E-International Relations (2018-2019)

Articles Editor - E-International Relations (2015-2018)

Professional Experience 

Consultant - In Partnership With... (2016-17)

Consultant - Accenture (2015)

Security Analyst (Africa) - Frontier Horizons (2012-15)

Primary fields of research

  • Constructivism
  • Post-structuralism
  • Critical security studies
  • Visual politics
  • Gender
  • Political self-sacrifice
  • Feminism
  • Queer Theory
  • Social Movements

Teaching

2019

MA Course - Intersectional Relations: Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in International Relations 

2018

MA Course - Intersectional Relations: Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in International Relations 

BA Methods Workshop - Feminist Methods in International Relations

Expertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals

In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):

  • SDG 5 - Gender Equality

Education/Academic qualification

In The Gutter: The IR/Relevance of Comic Books, University of Sussex

1 Sept 201631 Aug 2017

Award Date: 26 Oct 2017

University of St Andrews

1 Sept 201231 Jul 2016

Award Date: 31 Jul 2016

Keywords

  • Faculty of Social Sciences
  • Poststructuralism
  • International Relations (IR)
  • Security
  • Visual Politics
  • Feminism
  • Gender
  • Sexuality
  • Queer Theory
  • Social Movements
  • LGBTQ+
  • SOGI

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