2020
DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2020.1809691
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‘I tell them that sex is sweet at the right time’ – A qualitative review of ‘pleasure gaps and opportunities’ in sexuality education programmes in Ghana and Kenya

Abstract: View related articles View Crossmark data 'I tell them that sex is sweet at the right time'-A qualitative review of 'pleasure gaps and opportunities' in sexuality education programmes in Ghana and Kenya

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Cited by 28 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…There was less attention overall to sexual pleasure and choice in the special issue articles, despite this being explicitly emphasised in the call for papers. One article (Singh et al, 2020) explicitly focused on strategies for integrating pleasure into comprehensive sexuality education, while other authors offered an analytic lens that showed the ways that persons can experience sexual pleasure and have agency for sexual consent even in contexts of sexual rights constraints.…”
Section: Attention To Sexual Pleasure and Consentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…There was less attention overall to sexual pleasure and choice in the special issue articles, despite this being explicitly emphasised in the call for papers. One article (Singh et al, 2020) explicitly focused on strategies for integrating pleasure into comprehensive sexuality education, while other authors offered an analytic lens that showed the ways that persons can experience sexual pleasure and have agency for sexual consent even in contexts of sexual rights constraints.…”
Section: Attention To Sexual Pleasure and Consentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The predominant focus of sexual health research with displaced persons focuses on fear and dangersexual and gender-based violence, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), unmet reproductive health needs that span contraception to safe abortion access, and maternal and children's mortality. Singh et al (2020) discuss in "'I tell them that sex is sweet at the right time' -A qualitative review of 'pleasure gaps and opportunities' in sexuality education programmes in Ghana and Kenya" the importance of recognising that sexual pleasure stimulates sexual behaviour. Their article underscores sexual pleasure, alongside sexual satisfaction and uptake of safer sex practices, as core components of sexual rights.…”
Section: Attention To Sexual Pleasure and Consentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…More recently, there is evidence that sexual pleasure plays a significant role in promoting contraceptive and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use (Higgins, 2018). Moreover, there is growing evidence to suggest that pleasure-focused sex education can improve self-esteem and health behaviors (Hanbury & Eastham, 2016;Schalet, 2009;Scott-Sheldon & Johnson, 2006;Singh et al, 2020). Yet what we know about pleasure in first sexual experiences and our understanding of what shapes it has yet to be brought together.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%