“…Debates about pornography have typically revolved around two polarizing positions: writers critical of pornography who argue that it is an eroticization of men's violence against women (VAW; Brownmiller, 1975;Dines, 2010;Dworkin, 1981), and those writing from a more libertarian position, claiming that pornography can be a positive form of sexual expression and may even serve as a form of sex education (McElroy, 1995;Strossen, 1995;Weitzer, 2011). In more recent years, however, due to the expansion and increasing cultural normalization of the pornography industry (Tyler & Quek, 2016), a focus on health has also emerged alongside these debates, looking at the most negative impacts that pornography has had on young people's psychosexual and social development (Fernandez et al, 2021;Hilton & Watts, 2011). Within this emerging field, there have been studies of pornography consumers' reasons for rejecting pornography, largely through the study of self-help or "rebooting" communities (Chasioti & Binnie, 2021;Fernandez et al, 2021;Taylor & Jackson, 2018) and research focusing on an addiction model of pornography use (Hilton & Watts, 2011).…”