@inbook{70084adb69794d17a7d5bcc62cc0c1dd,
title = "Conclusion",
abstract = "This chapter revisits the points of departure for the book and approaches Russia, Turkey, and Scandinavia as contested, multiple, ambivalent, and fluid categories. Recognizing the multiple convergences and shifts that have characterized feminist and LGBTI+ resistances throughout this book, the chapter locates these enactments within a broader context of more spectacular, attention-seeking forms of political expression as well as less visible and small-scale, everyday forms of resistance. Within such broader contexts, this chapter argues, it is possible to catch sight of the fluidity between various scales of resistance—individual/collective, micro/meso/macro, local-transnational—which can incite and inspire new practices of resistance. By so doing, it is concluded, these struggles can also be seen to carry hope for more open-ended futures.",
keywords = "Beyond East–West/North–South dichotomies, Convergences, Individual/collective, Local-transnational, Micro/meso/macro, Scales, Shifts",
author = "Selin {\c C}ağatay and Mia Liinason and Olga Sasunkevich",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022, The Author(s).",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-84451-6\_6",
language = "English",
series = "Thinking Gender in Transnational Times",
publisher = "Palgrave Macmillan",
pages = "239--248",
booktitle = "Thinking Gender in Transnational Times",
address = "United Kingdom",
}