How Gender Roles Influence Sexual and Reproductive Health Among South African Adolescents
- 1 September 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Studies in Family Planning
- Vol. 34 (3) , 160-172
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1728-4465.2003.00160.x
Abstract
Although the literature on Africa increasingly adopts a gendered approach to sexual and reproductive health issues, few studies have addressed adolescent pregnancy and parenthood in such a framework. This article examines links between gender ideology or gender roles and the social impact of adolescent childbearing in the lives of rural and urban adolescents in KwaZulu/Natal, South Africa. It employs a triangulated research methodology (focus‐group discussions, narrative role playing and discussions, and questionnaires and in‐depth interviews) to inform an analysis of adolescents' notions of male and female gender ideals. This analysis forms the basis for an exploration of the potential influence of adolescent childbearing on young peoples' lives and factors that shape their sexual and reproductive well‐being. Results indicate that gender ideals are grounded in traits that reinforce poor sexual negotiation dynamics and behavioral double standards and that place adolescents at risk for early pregnancy and other sexual and reproductive health complications. Overall, adolescent parenthood is viewed negatively by participants of both sexes because it compromises personal, professional, and financial aspirations. Compared with its effect on boys, parenthood has a disproportionate (and highly negative) impact on girls that is directly linked to gender‐based inequities. The article addresses the research and policy implications of these findings.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pregnancy Termination among South African AdolescentsStudies in Family Planning, 2002
- "When Men Speak Women Listen": Gender Socialisation and Young Adolescents' Attitudes to Sexual and Reproductive IssuesAfrican Journal of Reproductive Health, 2001
- ‘I think condoms are good but, aai, I hate those things’:: condom use among adolescents and young people in a Southern African townshipPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Absent and Problematic Men: Demographic Accounts of Male Reproductive RolesPopulation and Development Review, 2000
- “He forced me to love him”: putting violence on adolescent sexual health agendasSocial Science & Medicine, 1998
- Demography, Feminism, and the Science-Policy NexusPopulation and Development Review, 1997
- Infect one, infect all: Zulu youth response to the aids epidemic in South AfricaMedical Anthropology, 1997
- Sexual Non-NegotiationAgenda, 1996
- Violence against women: A neglected public health issue in less developed countriesSocial Science & Medicine, 1994
- The South African Fertility DeclinePopulation and Development Review, 1993