Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Allies (LGBTQ and Allies) Network
The LGBTQ+ and Allies Staff Network Group meets regularly to celebrate diversity, discuss concerns, and to act as LGBTQ+ consultants for the university. The network is here to support you as an LGBTQ+ member of staff and to make sure that your voice is heard when it needs to be. The group is also open to allies - those who may not necessarily define themselves as LGBTQ+, but are interested in advancing and supporting the work of the group and advancing LGBTQ+ equality.
Any member of staff or PhD student can come along to a meeting and we very much welcome new members.
What we do
The LGBTQ+ and Allies Staff Network Group aims to:
- Provide a forum for LGBTQ+ staff (including those with multiple identities) from across all departments of the university to network and discuss issues that have an effect on us.
- Provide a voice for LGBTQ+ staff (including those with multiple identities) by offering a source of consultation on LGBTQ+ issues relating to university policies and practices.
- Assist with policy development on LGBTQ+ issues by providing advice and feedback to Human Resources and university committees.
The LGBTQ+ and Allies Staff Network Group has contributed to a number of campaigns and policies at º£½ÇÉçÇø that have an impact on LGBTQ+ staff and students, including:
- The Stonewall Workplace Equality Index and continuing support
- Introducing º£½ÇÉçÇø Pride as an annual event on º£½ÇÉçÇø’s events calendar
- Providing representation on the Equality and Diversity and Inclusion Committee
- Being recognised by Stonewall as a ‘Highly Commended Network Group’ in 2017
How to get involved
The network group confidentially supports employees to report LGBT related bullying and harassment, for example, homophobia, biphobia and transphobia. There is a closed section of the meeting for members to hold confidential discussions in a supportive environment.
Members of the group are also happy to provide friendly support on LGBTQ+ matters to all staff at º£½ÇÉçÇø who do not wish to attend meetings.
We are also particularly keen to welcome allies to our meetings - allies are important to enable us all to work together to achieve equality. Please see the Stonewall website for tips on being an effective ally, with tips including: educating and empowering yourself, listening, being visible and challenging, influencing others and striving for equality beyond just LGBTQ+.
The network group are also closely aligned to the LGBTQ Research Centre at º£½ÇÉçÇø.
Network dates and upcoming events
Wednesday 17 January 2023, 12pm-12.30pm: Mindfulness Meditation (a cross-network event)
Thursday 2 February 2023, 9am-10am: º£½ÇÉçÇø Pride: LGBTQ+ and Allies Network - coffee and chat
Tuesday 7 February 2023, 12pm-12.30pm: º£½ÇÉçÇø Pride: Mindfulness meditation (a cross-network event)
Wednesday 10 May 2023, 12pm-12.30pm: Mindfulness Meditation (a cross-network event)
Thursday 25 May 2023, 12pm-1pm: Lunch and networking with University of Leicester LGBTQ+ Staff Network
Wednesday 7 June 2023, 1pm-2pm: Kimberlin Library archive tour - Andrew Logan and Bryony Lavery
Monday 25 September 2023, 5.30pm-7pm: LGBTQ+ and Allies Staff Network - Film Screening: Single Man
Wednesday 8 November 2023, 12pm-1pm: Negotiating parenting and caring roles and careers in higher education (a cross-network event)
Thursday 16 November 2023, 12- 1pm: LGBTQ+ and Allies Staff Network lunch social
Wednesday 29 November 2023, 12pm-1pm: Queer Menopause
Leicester Pride 2 September
Bi Visibility Day 23 September
Role models
Being a role model is aspirational and we need diverse ways of being so that students and staff across the university have the freedom to be. Being an LGBTQ+ role model inevitably means coming out. These are some of my reflections on coming out and how allies can help this process. For most of us, coming out is not an Ellen DeGeneres moment, where you open the dark closet door and step out into the bright sunlight of LGBTQ+ visibility. It’s not a once and for all experience like Ellen’s, where she came out and all the world knew; sometimes it’s a gentle tweak of the curtains and at others it’s something of a roller coaster ride.
Why do LGBTQ+ people come out? We come out because we want to engage in typical workplace conversations about what we did at the weekend, or we want to bring our partner to a workplace social or we simply want to say that our partner is poorly at the moment. If you are heterosexual, you don’t need to come out because you can be fairly sure that most people will have assumed that you are ‘straight’. But if we are LGBTQ+, we may pause, because in coming out we may then have to explain ourselves or open ourselves up to scrutiny. And for many of us, this is an additional hurdle we would rather do without.
There are lots of reasons why people don’t come out. It may be that we don’t fit the stereotype of what a ‘lesbian looks like’, or we have children, or we are from a BME background, or we are a person of faith, and so the assumption is that we can’t possibly be LGBTQ+. Some trans people may not wish to disclose because they are living in the gender identity they always should have been. We shouldn’t disclose on their behalf. Our identities are often complex, we do not fit neatly in to boxes. It can be an effort to explain. So, sometimes it’s purely pragmatic: we ask ourselves, does this person need to know? How will it affect my working relationship with them or the wider workplace environment?
Reactions to that first coming out may shape our decisions about whether we come out to others in the future. How might we respond as supportive allies? A low-key accepting response often works well. Reassure the person of your confidentiality and above all take things at their pace. They may only want to tell you and to live with that for a while to see how it feels.
The benefits of coming out are that we are not constantly looking over our shoulders or worrying who knows what about us. We can bring our whole selves to work and to our studies; and in doing, this we ourselves become role models. Being an LGBTQ+ role model helps to create an inclusive and safe environment for others. University can have a huge influence on our futures. Our time spent at º£½ÇÉçÇø can help us to find the path to an authentic sense of self where we can have the freedom to be: we can achieve our potential in our studies, perform better at work and enjoy fuller and richer personal lives.
The links below highlight some LGBTQ+ Allies role models, from staff and students, to local and national role models, covering a range of identities within the LGBTQ+ Allies community:
Sarah Thomson - Director of Strategic Partnerships
David Rose - Former Head of Health, Safety and Wellbeing
Zowie Davy - Associate Professor, Centre for LGBTQ Research and Division of Social Work
Imogen Perkins - Mental Health Intervention Officer, Library and Student Services
Bev Hancock-Smith - Senior Lecturer, Library and Learning Services
Mica Srbljanin - Faculty Executive Project Officer for Health and Life Sciences
Past Speakers at º£½ÇÉçÇø:
º£½ÇÉçÇø role models guide
Leicestershire LGBTQ+ Role Models
Union representatives
Martin Morgan-Taylor - UCU
Phil Adams - Equality and Diversity Co-ordinator - UNISON