Santiago Alba Rico is a writer and essayist with a degree in Philosophy from the Complutense University of Madrid. In the 1980s, he was a screenwriter on the celebrated Spanish TV programme La bola de cristal and has published over twenty books on politics, philosophy and literature, as well as three stories for children and a theatre production.
Mª Antonia Cano is a social educator who has been part of the feminist movement in Spain since the 1970s. Today, she is a member of the United Feminist Assembly of Seville (AFUS) and the NGO Acciónenred Andalucía (the Andalusia Action Network). She is a specialist in treating gender-based violence and supports women suffering abuse or at risk of encountering violence.
Gerard Coll Planas holds a PhD in Sociology from the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) and is a full professor at the Universitat de Vic, where he directs the Centre d’Estudis Interdisciplinaris de Gènere. He has published the books La carne y la metáfora. Una reflexión sobre el cuerpo en la teoría queer (Egales, 2012) and Dibujando el género (Egales, 2013), among others.
Cristina Garaizabal is a clinical psychologist who specialises in psychoanalysis. She is an expert in issues related to sexual diversity and gender with an extensive background in therapy support for trans people. She has published articles on this theme in different books, for instance Transexualidad, transgenerismo y cultura (Talasa Ediciones, 1998), compiled by José Antonio Nieto, and El género desordenado. Críticas en torno a la patologización de la transexualidad (Egales, 2010), edited by Gerard Coll-Planes and Miquel Missé, among others.
Belén González Uría holds a degree in Journalism from the University of Seville, with which she has continued to work as a researcher in the field of communication and gender. She is involved in different projects on gender and sexuality focused on young people in secondary and higher education, for instance Con.vive, Red Joven Sexo con-sentido and Placeres fílmicos. Notable among her diverse array of publications is Buenos Tratos: prevención de la violencia sexista (Talasa, 2010).
Carme Guil has served as a judge in the Criminal Division of the Regional Court of Barcelona for the past twelve years. Previously, and for nearly two decades, she was a public prosecutor in Barcelona, where she worked as a juvenile prosecutor. She belongs to the Spain's European Association of Judges for Mediation (GEMME), devoted to the pacific resolution of conflicts.
Laura Macaya is a social educator specialised in gender perspective, evaluation, intervention and support for women experiencing gender-based violence and social vulnerability. She works in collaboration with sex workers to provide support in the process of de-stigmatisation and recognition, impacting the public and institutional spheres to gain recognition for these people’s rights. de desestigmatización y reconocimiento, incidiendo en el ámbito público e institucional para el reconocimiento de sus derechos.
Miquel Missé is a sociologist and an expert in gender and sexuality who currently works as an adviser and trainer in the sphere of politics for sexual and gender diversity. His interests focus on promoting a plural and critical trans culture, as well as raising awareness through people with diverse and transformative gender experiences who are points of reference. He is the author of Transexualidades, otras miradas posibles (Egales, 2013) and A la conquista del cuerpo equivocado (Egales, 2018).
Josetxu Riviere is a specialist in equality, gender and masculinities. At present, he works on the Gizonduz de Emakunde-Basque Institute for Women programme, which chiefly aims for men’s awareness, engagement and participation in issues of equality between men and women. He is also a member of Red de Hombres por la Igualdad (the Men’s Network for Equality) and works in the cooperative Berdintasun Proiektuak.
Clara Serra is a researcher, feminist activist and former representative in the Assembly of Madrid. She is currently a researcher at the Universitat de Barcelona and an instructor in issues around gender and feminism, and is also part of the collective Malas Feministas. She was head of the Equality Area of the political party Podemos from its establishment until 2017, and is the author of Leonas y zorras. Estrategias políticas feministas (Catarata, 2018) and Manual Ultravioleta (Penguin Random House, 2019). She also writes for different media outlets, among them El País.
Paloma Uría holds a PhD in Philosophy and Literature from the University of Oviedo and is a retired secondary school Language and Literature teacher. She was an active campaigner in anti-Francoist opposition and is a member of the Front of Popular Liberation and the Communist Movement of Asturias. She is the founder of the Feminist Association of Asturias and the collective Otras Voces Feministas, and is the co-author of Polémicas feministas (Hablan las mujeres) (Talasa, 1985) and the author of El feminismo que no llegó al poder. Trayectoria de un feminismo crítico (Talasa, 2019).