2011
DOI: 10.1007/s13178-011-0042-5
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Resource and Risk: Youth Sexuality and New Media Use

Abstract: Some contemporary moral panics orbit around youth sexuality and new media use. This article addresses those moral panics by investigating teenagers' practices regarding new media and sexuality. New media technologies are central parts of young people's social, romantic, and sexual lives. These communication technologies are important in their practices of meeting, dating, and breaking up. New media technologies also provide important resources about sexual health and identities. However, these informational an… Show more

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Cited by 109 publications
(73 citation statements)
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References 46 publications
(46 reference statements)
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“…In fact, more recent works, carried out since the last years of the 1990s, have identified the main features of youth's media and leisure habits, emphasizing in particular their use of new media (e.g., Athenstaedt et al 2009;Bell and Dittmar 2011;Coatsworth et al 2005;Hagen 2007;Holloway and Green 2008;Livingstone et al 2011;Pascoe 2011;Roberts and Foehr 2008;Romer et al 2012;Thulin and Vilhelmson 2007;Videnovic´ et al 2010;Wilska and Pedrozo 2007).…”
Section: Young People's Media Usage and Leisure Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, more recent works, carried out since the last years of the 1990s, have identified the main features of youth's media and leisure habits, emphasizing in particular their use of new media (e.g., Athenstaedt et al 2009;Bell and Dittmar 2011;Coatsworth et al 2005;Hagen 2007;Holloway and Green 2008;Livingstone et al 2011;Pascoe 2011;Roberts and Foehr 2008;Romer et al 2012;Thulin and Vilhelmson 2007;Videnovic´ et al 2010;Wilska and Pedrozo 2007).…”
Section: Young People's Media Usage and Leisure Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Variations in digital capabilities and access to technology may also affect the representativeness of results ( Denissen et al, 2010). Although this issue is decreasingly relevant with contemporary youth populations in the United States and Canada, as their online participation is nearly universal ( Lenhart et al, 2015;Steeves, 2014), some differences may persist that affect the ability to both access and use technology ( Pascoe, 2011;Willis, 2011). Online opportunities may remain more limited for youths who have less-educated parents, come from lower SES backgrounds, live in rural areas, or are ethnoracial minorities ( Pascoe, 2011;Roberts & Foehr, 2008), potentially influencing online sample composition.…”
Section: Concerns Regarding Online Surveysmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although this issue is decreasingly relevant with contemporary youth populations in the United States and Canada, as their online participation is nearly universal ( Lenhart et al, 2015;Steeves, 2014), some differences may persist that affect the ability to both access and use technology ( Pascoe, 2011;Willis, 2011). Online opportunities may remain more limited for youths who have less-educated parents, come from lower SES backgrounds, live in rural areas, or are ethnoracial minorities ( Pascoe, 2011;Roberts & Foehr, 2008), potentially influencing online sample composition. However, these indicators may be decreasingly significant as the technological immersion of youths in multiple settings (for example, home, school, community) continues to increase.…”
Section: Concerns Regarding Online Surveysmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Where research has avoided the dehumanising narrative of 'sexualisation' as degradation in exploring this issue, the result has been a subtle analysis with great critical power (e.g. Renold & Ringrose, 2008;Pascoe, 2011).…”
Section: Conclusion: Beyond 'Sexualisation'mentioning
confidence: 99%