1st Edition

Sex, Sexuality and Sexual Health in Southern Africa

Edited By Deevia Bhana, Mary Crewe, Peter Aggleton Copyright 2023
216 Pages
by Routledge

216 Pages
by Routledge

216 Pages
by Routledge

This book— Sex, Sexuality and Sexual Health in Southern Africa— is structured around four major themes: gender and sexuality diversity; love, pleasure and respect; gender, sexual violence and health; and sexuality, gender and sexual justice. Chapters in this book analyse sexuality in relation to recent developments in the Southern African region and what this might mean for contemporary... Read more

Chapter 1. Sex, sexuality and sexual health in Southern Africa

Deevia Bhana, Mary Crewe and Peter Aggleton

Part I: Gender and sexuality diversity

Chapter 2. Border crossings: Trans allyship in Southern Africa

Christi Kruger and Pierre Brouard

Chapter 3. Beyond borders: Reproducing and challenging homophobic norms in Zimbabwe

Nelson Muparamoto

Chapter 4. Civil society organisations responding to homophobia and transphobia in Namibian schools

Anthony Brown

Part II: Love, pleasure and respect

Chapter 5. Young women’s experiences of intimate partner violence, respect and agency in South African informal settlements

Samantha Willan, Nwabisa Shai, Nolwazi Ntini, Andrew Gibbs and Rachel Jewkes

Chapter 6. The free sex (talk) boys and men might want

Kopano Ratele

Chapter 7. More to be desired: the need to engage men and couples around communication, sexual pleasure and consent in Southern African safer sex interventions

Laura Pascoe

Part III: Gender, sexual violence and health

Chapter 8. Men’s emotions, violence and change

Andrew Gibbs, Laura Washington, Smanga Mkhwanazi, Sivuyile Khaula, Zama Khoza, Mziwethu Gcuma and Yandisa Sikweyiya

Chapter 9. Power, visibility and sexual and reproductive health in southern Africa

Blessings N. Kaunda-Khangamwa, Alexander Kagaha, Nirvana Pillay and Lenore Manderson

Chapter 10. Examining the gendered experiences of migrant and refugee women in Southern Africa

Tamaryn L. Crankshaw, Jane Freedman and Victoria M. Mutambara

Part IV: Sexuality, gender and sexual justice

Chapter 11. Refining youth sexualities empowerment programmes: the development of the Masizixhobise toolkit based on a critical sexual and reproductive citizenship framework

Catriona Ida Macleod and Sarah Moore

Chapter 12. Thinking with creativity, affect and embodiment in sexual justice scholarship

Tamara Shefer

Chapter 13. Gender and sexuality diversity in Southern Africa

Tiffany Jones

Afterword

Marc Epprecht and Aminata Cécile Mbaye

Biography

Deevia Bhana is the DSI/NRF South African Research Chair (SARChI) in Gender and Childhood Sexuality at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Her research examines gender and sexuality across the young life course focusing on agency, masculinities, inequalities, reproduction, health, violence and education. Her recent publications include Gender, Sexuality and Violence in South African Educational Spaces (ed. with S. Singh and T. Msibi, Palgrave Macmillan, 2021) and Love, Sex and Teenage Sexual Cultures in South Africa: 16 Turning 17 (Routledge, 2018).

Mary Crewe trained in the social sciences and education at the Universities of Natal (Pietermaritzburg) and the Witwatersrand. She has extensive experience in high school and tertiary education. She taught at the University of the Witwatersrand before establishing the Community AIDS Centre in Hillbrow at the start of the HIV epidemic is South Africa. She moved to the University of Pretoria in 1999 to create the Centre for the Study of AIDS and was its Director until 2020. She wrote one of the earliest books on AIDS in South Africa and has published extensively in the field of school-based HIV and sexuality education. Currently, she is a Research Associate in the Department of Historical and Heritage Studies at the University of Pretoria.

Peter Aggleton has a background in the social sciences as applied to well-being, education and health. He holds senior professorial positions at a number of universities including The Australian National University in Canberra, UNSW Sydney, and UCL in London. He is an adjunct professor in the Australian Research Centre for Sex, Health and Society at La Trobe University in Melbourne. In addition to his academic work as a researcher, teacher, editor and writer, Peter has served as a senior adviser to UNAIDS, UNESCO, UNFPA and WHO. He has worked extensively across Africa, Asia and Latin America.