TRACE is a five-year research project (2023-2027) funded by the European Research Council (ERC), coordinated by Professor Ana Cristina Santos at the Centre for Social Studies (CES) of the University of Coimbra, Portugal. The project researches LGBTQI+ ageing, ageism, and age-related politics in Southern Europe, offering a unique perspective on how ageing intersects with sexual and gender diversity across time and space, drawing on cross-national fieldwork in Portugal, Italy, Greece, Malta and Slovenia.
In recent years, ageing has been considered a priority area in both governmental policies and research agendas. TRACE sits at the trans/interdisciplinary intersection of Gender and LGBTQI+ Studies and Age, Ageing, and Life Course Studies – contributing to the consolidation of the field of LGBTQI+ Ageing Studies. By bringing together distant memories and the current daily management of intimate life, TRACE sociologically explores the impacts in later life of growing up in a time when legal recognition was not available for LGBTQI+ people, offering a timely contribution to debates on ageing in the context of growing populism and anti-gender backlash in Europe.
TRACE embraces a biographic narrative, life course approach, designed to preserve the embodied memory and knowledge of LGBTQI+ people over 60. By capturing these life stories, TRACE is providing invaluable insights into the lived experiences of older adults who have witnessed and survived fundamental changes in intimate citizenship regimes across their lifespan, from criminalization to the aids-crisis related stigma and the 21st century increasing recognition of formal rights, including marriage, in many contexts.
The research enables an in-depth portrait of rapidly changing intimate citizenship regimes in different regions of Southern Europe today, grounded on the life stories of older adults whose lifespan accompanied these changes. Their shared and untold past of oppression will inform scholarly knowledge and current and future policymaking - playing a crucial role in shaping more equitable futures for LGBTQI+ older adults, reinforcing their place as key witnesses and agents of social change.