Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

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medicine

The structural influence of family and parenting on young people's sexual and reproductive health in rural northern Tanzania

Culture, Health and Sexuality, Volume 17, No. 6, Year 2015

This paper explores the structural role of the family and parenting in young people's sexual and reproductive health. The study involved eight weeks of participant observation, 26 in-depth interviews, and 11 group discussions with young people aged 14–24 years, and 20 in-depth interviews and 6 group discussions with parents/carers of children in this age group. At an individual level, parenting and family structure were found to affect young people's sexual behaviour by influencing children's self-confidence and interactional competence, limiting discussion of sexual health and shaping economic provision for children, which in turn affected parental authority and daughters' engagement in risky sexual behaviour. Sexual norms are reproduced both through parents' explicit prohibitions and their own behaviours. Girls are socialised to accept men's superiority, which shapes their negotiation of sexual relationships. Interventions to improve young people's sexual and reproductive health should recognise the structural effects of parenting, both in terms of direct influences on children and the dynamics by which structural barriers such as gendered power relations and cultural norms around sexuality are transmitted across generations.
Statistics
Citations: 54
Authors: 3
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Research Areas
Maternal And Child Health
Sexual And Reproductive Health
Study Design
Ethnographic Study
Study Approach
Qualitative
Study Locations
Tanzania
Participants Gender
Male
Female