24 research outputs found
Transformational Sexualities: Motivations of women who pay for sexual services
Previous research on client motivations to purchase sexual services in the UK has predominantly focused on the experiences of men. Women who buy sex have largely been overlooked, as it is commonly assumed that women provide, rather than purchase sexual services. In addressing this empirical absence, this article examines data gained from 50 interviews with women clients and sex workers. It examines the reasons why women decide to purchase sexual services in the UK. We argue that the increasing importance of contemporary capitalism and consumerism has shaped womenâs engagement in the sex industry as clients. We show how womenâs sexual agency and assertiveness as clients, inverts the female sex worker/male client binary assumed to characterize commercial sex and illustrates the overlap and convergence of male and female sexuality. Our research thus contributes to an understanding of female sexuality more broadly, as exemplifying the hallmarks of âtransformational sexualitiesâ in cosmopolitanism (Plummer, 2015)
Sexotic: The interplay between sexualization and exoticization
The introduction reflects on the methodological value and implications of the concept âsexoticâ, situates it in the research on processes of sexualization and exoticization and demonstrates how the individual contributions to the special issue relate to three central topics that can be approached via the sexotic: mobilities and migrations, arts and media, science and moralities
Advocating for HIV Prevention and Care
The number of older women living with HIV in Kenya is increasing.
However, there are little empirical data available about their role in HIV prevention.
The purpose of this study was to understand the nuanced role of older women in HIV
prevention. We engaged 54 HIV-positive women in three narrative-eliciting interviews
between 2009 and 2010 over a period of 6 months to understand their role in HIV
prevention. In this article, we focus on a sample subset of 7 rural women 50 years and
older living with HIV. From narrative analysis of 19 interviews from 7 women who were 50
years and older, four themes emerged: promoting HIV transmission risk reduction,
promoting HIV testing, educating others about HIV, and protecting children from HIV
infection. HIV-positive older women are engaged in helping mitigate HIV in their
communities and should be central to meaningful HIV-related interventions especially in
rural communitie