We are all feminist, but do we think the same? A focus group analysis of cisgender heterosexual and lesbian, bisexual, and queer women on the collaboration between feminist and LGBTIQA+ movement in Spain Galván-Hernández, Danna Del Fresno Díaz, Ángel Sáez-Lumbreras, Alba Estevan-Reina, Lucía Lemus Martín, Soledad De feminismo grupos focales cualitativo LGBTIQA+ solidaridad intraminoritaria Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Spanish Ministry of Research through an FPU21/03042. Grant PID2022.141182NB.I00 funded by MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033ERDF/EU. This study examines the perceptions of LBQ+ and heterosexual feminist cis women, regarding how they define feminism and perceive the relationship between the feminist and LGBTIQA+ movement in the context of progressive trans rights legislation in Spain (Trans Law, approved in 2023). Two two-hour focus groups were conducted with 12 feminist cis women, 6 of whom were LBQ+ and 6 heterosexuals. Data was analyzed through reflexive thematic analysis, identifying 3 themes: Feminism, conflicts in the feminist movement concerning the Trans Law and intergroup collaboration. While both groups held similar definitions of feminism, LBQ+ women emphasized the importance of an intersectional perspective. Both groups expressed interest in addressing gender inequalities and forming alliances but differed in their analysis of these alliances. Heterosexual women focused on alliance challenges and threats, while LBQ+ women emphasized the need of empathy and collaboration. Heterosexual women expressed mixed feelings toward the proposed Trans Law, whereas LBQ+ cis women expressed clear support for the law and the protection of trans rights. Participants suggested actions to promote the allyship (e.g. creating common spaces and confronting LGBTIQA+phobic aggressions). While both groups express willingness to collaborate, differences and challenges are inherent in diverse feminism. Such differences should be embraced as opportunities for debate and effective collaboration, to reduce conflict and promote social transformation. It demonstrates the potential of alliances between movements to address gender-related social inequalities as a global challenge. 2025-05-28T09:56:27Z 2025-05-28T09:56:27Z 2025 journal article Published version: Galván-Hernández, D., del Fresno-Díaz, Á., Sáez-Lumbreras, A., Estevan-Reina, L., & de Lemus, S. (2025). “We are all feminist”, but do we think the same? A focus group analysis of cisgender heterosexual and lesbian, bisexual, and queer women on the collaboration between feminist and LGBTIQA+ movement in Spain. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 31(2), 153–166. https://doi.org/10.1037/pac0000778 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/104305 10.1037/pac0000778 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ open access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional American Psychological Association