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1.
Cult Health Sex ; 24(3): 421-436, 2022 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33512307

RESUMO

Data on transfeminine participants from a 2016 Pacific Multi-Country Mapping and Behavioural Study evidence high levels of verbal, physical and sexual abuse, as well as discrimination. In interviews from the same study, accounts of hardship were frequently countered with assertions of happiness and talk of acceptance. This paper analyses these accounts and, in particular, the ways in which interviewees viewed and managed their place in society. Data provide insights into the factors that support transfeminine occupation of a positive place in some contemporary Pacific settings, highlighting negotiation between modern and traditional, and local and global, cultures and values.


Assuntos
Delitos Sexuais , Transexualidade , Humanos , Polinésia , Samoa , Tonga
2.
Cult Health Sex ; 21(5): 591-604, 2019 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30328772

RESUMO

This article is born out of an oral history study of 31 elderly homosexual men in four cities in China. It shows the ways in which major events of Chinese history since the birth of the People's Republic in 1949 intervene in personal lives and, in turn, how personal lives are drawn into larger historical events. One of the major themes running through these life narratives is that of love and duty. The interrelationship, as well as the tensions, between duty and love is a central part of the experiences of elderly Chinese homosexual men; their lives have been beset by hardships and duty, as well as by the joys of love, and these have an impact on their health and wellbeing. The experience of one individual, Mr Peng, illustrates the important yet shifting ways in which love and duty have been twinned throughout key life events. His narrative indicates an intricate interweaving of love for family, love for Deng, his male partner of 20 years, and love for his wife, as well as duty to family and to a patron. The inseparable couplet of love and duty served as the source of hardship and pain, but also of protection and great joy.


Assuntos
Cultura , Homossexualidade Masculina/psicologia , Amor , Narração , Parceiros Sexuais/psicologia , Idoso , China , Humanos , Masculino , Cônjuges/psicologia
3.
Arch Sex Behav ; 47(5): 1517-1527, 2018 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29305773

RESUMO

This article considers the terms prostitution, sex work, transactional sex, and survival sex, the logic of their deployment and utility to research concerned with people who are paid for sex, and HIV. The various names for paid sex in HIV research are invested in strategically differentiated positionings of people who receive payment and emphasize varying degrees of choice. The terminologies that seek to distinguish a range of economically motivated paid sex practices from sex work are characterized by an emphasis on the local and the particular, efforts to evade the stigma attached to the labels sex worker and prostitute, and an analytic prioritizing of culture. This works to bestow cultural legitimacy on some locally specific forms of paid sex and positions those practices as artifacts of culture rather than economy. This article contends that, in HIV research in particular, it is necessary to be cognizant of ways the deployment of alternative paid sex categories relocates and reinscribes stigma elsewhere. While local identity categories may be appropriate for program implementation, a global category is necessary for planning and funding purposes and offers a purview beyond that of isolated local phenomena. We argue that "sex work" is the most useful global term for use in research into economically motivated paid sex and HIV, primarily because it positions paid sex as a matter of labor, not culture or morality.


Assuntos
Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Trabalho Sexual , Profissionais do Sexo , Humanos , Projetos de Pesquisa , Estigma Social
4.
Health Promot Int ; 31(4): 946-953, 2016 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26135585

RESUMO

A recent overview of HIV/STI prevention programmes for sex workers in the Pacific region indicates that, despite a regional policy shift from universal to targeted interventions, Pacific Island countries currently lack core HIV/STI prevention services for sex workers. Across the region, condom distribution, peer outreach and support services for sex workers have ceased even in countries where such programmes had previously existed. This article cautions that the endorsement of empowerment projects does not negate the important role of condom access in HIV and STI prevention efforts for Pacific sex workers. While community empowerment underpins, and is essential to the sustainability of, effective interventions, it does not constitute an adequate form of HIV and STI prevention in and of itself. We contend that in the context of the Pacific Islands, timely and effective HIV prevention measures must specifically attend to the implementation of, and sustained support for, behavioural interventions such as sex-worker-specific peer education, condom and lubricant distribution, and access to appropriate sexual health services. Further, the responsibility for delivery of these should not be borne solely by fledgling sex worker organizations and communities. The evolution of targeted interventions in the Pacific and the current lack of funded condom distribution programmes highlight a more generalizable imperative within HIV prevention to ensure that behaviour change efforts are not considered to be extraneous to, or rendered redundant by, empowerment-based interventions.


Assuntos
Preservativos/provisão & distribuição , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Poder Psicológico , Profissionais do Sexo/educação , Infecções por HIV/economia , Infecções por HIV/transmissão , Promoção da Saúde/economia , Promoção da Saúde/métodos , Humanos , Lubrificantes/provisão & distribuição , Ilhas do Pacífico , Profissionais do Sexo/psicologia , Infecções Sexualmente Transmissíveis/prevenção & controle
6.
Cult Health Sex ; 13(3): 313-26, 2011 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21077010

RESUMO

Young people are a key group for HIV prevention in the Pacific region where levels of STIs are high and condom use is low. During 2008, 62 in-depth interviews were conducted with people aged between 18 and 25 years in Tonga and Vanuatu. The research was aimed at understanding factors impacting on young peoples' condom use in two Pacific Island nations. The data show a marked disjuncture between attitudes and practice with regard to condoms. This paper discusses factors underpinning that inconsistency and directs attention to the effect of social and cultural influences on young people's condom use. The authors conclude that individual-level approaches to improving rates of condom use will be inadequate unless they are informed by an understanding of the role of identity, culture and tradition in young peoples' decisions around condom use. The findings also underline the need for country-specific approaches to condom promotion efforts in the Pacific.


Assuntos
Preservativos/estatística & dados numéricos , Cultura , Comportamento Sexual/etnologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Feminino , Infecções por HIV/etnologia , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Masculino , Tonga , Vanuatu , Adulto Jovem
7.
J Homosex ; 64(1): 61-74, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27043042

RESUMO

This article describes the paradoxes experienced by homosexual men during the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Interviews with 31 elderly Chinese gay men were carried out in four cities in China in 2011. Although homosexual men were terribly persecuted, chaotic situations and dislocations of youth from their families provided young homosexual men with a remarkable degree of personal freedom and the opportunity to explore same-sex relations. Analysis of this seemingly contradictory conflation of persecution and freedom will allow us to explore the conditions and effects of the coming of age of homosexual men in a unique epoch in Chinese history.


Assuntos
Homossexualidade Masculina , Mudança Social , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , China , História do Século XX , Homossexualidade Masculina/história , Humanos , Relações Interpessoais , Masculino , Comportamento Sexual , Mudança Social/história , Adulto Jovem
8.
Harm Reduct J ; 3: 14, 2006 Mar 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16571134

RESUMO

This paper reviews the literature exploring issues around methamphetamine and injury. There was a paucity of peer reviewed quantitative research and a lack of large scale epidemiological studies. Further sources described cases and others described injury risk as part of an overall review of methamphetamine misuse. Thus, a number of limitations and potential biases exist within the literature. The main areas where associations were noted or extrapolated with methamphetamine use and injury were around driving and violence. Other associations with injury related to methamphetamine manufacture. There was also circumstantial evidence for third party injury (that is injury to those not specifically involved in drug use or drug manufacture); however, the available data are inadequate to confirm these associations/risks.

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