Literature DB >> 17189498

Who wins in the status games? Violence, sexual violence, and an emerging single standard among adolescent women.

Beatrice J Krauss1, Joanne O'Day, Christopher Godfrey, Kevin Rente, Elizabeth Freidin, Erica Bratt, Nadia Minian, Kraig Knibb, Christy Welch, Robert Kaplan, Gauri Saxena, Shawn McGinniss, Jacqueline Gilroy, Peter Nwakeze, Saundra Curtain.   

Abstract

Throughout U.S. history, women have changed their sexual behaviors in response to, or as actors affecting, economic, political, and legal imperatives; to preserve health; to promote new relationship, identity or career paths; to assert a set of values; as a result of new reproductive technologies; or to gain status. In adjusting to pressures or goals, women have not always acted, or been able to act, in the interests of their own health, identity, or status. As this article will demonstrate, women, in the short or long run, may attempt to preserve status at the cost of other values such as health. This may occur through conscious and critical choice or through less conscious processes in reaction to relatively larger forces whose impact has not been critically analyzed. With the awareness in the 1980s in the United States of an emergent and incurable sexually transmissible infection, HIV, it would have been anticipated that a new sexual caution may have appeared. Yet, across several research projects in the late 1990s and into the 21st century, as our research team interviewed youth in a high HIV seroprevalence neighborhood in New York City about HIV prevention, we began to hear that a substantial minority of young women and men were participating in social settings for sexual behavior that (1) put youth at risk for HIV; (2) appeared to be motivated by acquisition of status ("props," "points"); and (3) offered few ways for women to win in these status games. We estimate from one random dwelling unit sample that about one in eight youth have been present in these settings and half of them have participated in risky sexual behavior in such settings. The settings are often characterized by men's publicly offhand attitudes toward sexual encounters, are organized around men's status maintenance, and evidence peer pressures that are poorly understood by both young men and women participants. To regain status, some women participants have adopted attitudes more characteristic of men.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17189498      PMCID: PMC2814298          DOI: 10.1196/annals.1385.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  18 in total

1.  Influences on adolescents' decision to postpone onset of sexual intercourse: a survival analysis of virginity among youths aged 13 to 18 years.

Authors:  C Lammers; M Ireland; M Resnick; R Blum
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 5.012

2.  Sexual activity and contraceptive practices among teenagers in the United States, 1988 and 1995.

Authors:  J C Abma; F L Sonenstein
Journal:  Vital Health Stat 23       Date:  2001-04

3.  Sexy media matter: exposure to sexual content in music, movies, television, and magazines predicts black and white adolescents' sexual behavior.

Authors:  Jane D Brown; Kelly Ladin L'Engle; Carol J Pardun; Guang Guo; Kristin Kenneavy; Christine Jackson
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 7.124

4.  Cluster of HIV-positive young women--New York, 1997-1998.

Authors: 
Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  1999-05-28       Impact factor: 17.586

5.  Age differences between sexual partners in the United States.

Authors:  J E Darroch; D J Landry; S Oslak
Journal:  Fam Plann Perspect       Date:  1999 Jul-Aug

6.  Hugging my uncle: the impact of a parent training on children's comfort interacting with persons living with HIV.

Authors:  Beatrice J Krauss; Christopher C Godfrey; Joanne O'Day; Elizabeth Freidin
Journal:  J Pediatr Psychol       Date:  2006-02-01

7.  Coming up in the boogie down: the role of violence in the lives of adolescents in the South Bronx.

Authors:  N Freudenberg; L Roberts; B E Richie; R T Taylor; K McGillicuddy; M B Greene
Journal:  Health Educ Behav       Date:  1999-12

8.  Cluster of HIV-infected adolescents and young adults--Mississippi, 1999.

Authors: 
Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  2000-09-29       Impact factor: 17.586

9.  Women's interest in vaginal microbicides.

Authors:  J E Darroch; J J Frost
Journal:  Fam Plann Perspect       Date:  1999 Jan-Feb

Review 10.  Social context, sexual networks, and racial disparities in rates of sexually transmitted infections.

Authors:  Adaora A Adimora; Victor J Schoenbach
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2005-02-01       Impact factor: 5.226

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  4 in total

1.  Demographic and social predictors of intimate partner violence in Colombia : a dyadic power perspective.

Authors:  James Holland Jones; Brodie Ferguson
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  2009-06

Review 2.  Group sex events amongst non-gay drug users: an understudied risk environment.

Authors:  Samuel R Friedman; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Milagros Sandoval
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2010-08-25

3.  Group sex events and HIV/STI risk in an urban network.

Authors:  Samuel R Friedman; Melissa Bolyard; Maria Khan; Carey Maslow; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Beatrice Krauss; Sevgi O Aral
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2008-12-01       Impact factor: 3.731

4.  Frequency of Group Sex Participation and Risk for HIV/STI Among Young Adult Nightclub Scene Participants.

Authors:  Mance E Buttram; Steven P Kurtz
Journal:  Int J Sex Health       Date:  2017-10-26
  4 in total

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