This book examines the complex relationships between young masculinities and sexual health within Southern Africa. It considers how socio-cultural and economic factors shape young men’s experiences of masculinity and the effects on relationship dynamics, gender norms and sexual health.
Through thematic chapters covering love, pleasure, social norms, risk, and HIV, the book emphasises the global importance of engaging young men in fostering gender equity and promoting healthier sexual practices. Readers will benefit from a diverse range of methodologies and perspectives that highlight the plurality and fluidity of masculinities, challenging monolithic accounts of young men in the region whilst illustrating the global relevance of understanding local contexts in shaping masculinities. The book provides valuable insights for developing effective sexual health interventions that recognise and embrace 'other' masculinities. Sexual health approaches that resonate with the lived realities of young men can potentially enhance young men’s engagement and participation in promoting healthier relationships and practices.
With important insights for theory, policy, and practice, this book will be of interest to researchers across the fields of critical masculinity studies, sexual and reproductive health, gender studies and African studies, as well as policymakers, development practitioners, and activists.
This book examines the complex relationships between young masculinities and sexual health within Southern Africa. This book will interest researchers of critical masculinity studies, sexual and reproductive health, gender studies, and African studies, as well as policy makers, development practitioners, and activists.
1. Young masculinities and sexual health: perspectives from Southern Africa Part I: Love, pleasure and romance 2. Love, masculinity and alternative pathways to sexual health 3. Love as resistance? Young men’s narratives on intimate relationships and healthy sexualities in South Africa 4. Navigating love, romance and sexual health: adolescent boys' experiences in a South African township Part II: Social norms, masculinity and health 5. Masculine norms and sexual health implications for young men in Zimbabwe 6. Exploring the intersection of young men’s mobile-internet use, gender attitudes and intimate relationship dynamics: a mixed-methods study 7. Streetwise masculinities: poverty, risk-taking and sexual health in a South African township 8. Masculinities in transition: young trans men, gender and the South African health care system Part III: Masculinity and sexual risk 9. On the edge of a knife: young masculinity, poverty and sexual health 10. Amajita: masculinity and sexual risk among young men in a South African informal settlement 11. Mjolo, waithood and masculinities among out-of-school young men in Zimbabwe 12. Peer pressure and heterosexual norms among young black men in Somkhele, South Africa Part IV: Masculinity and HIV 13. How young Zimbabwean men's attitudes towards female PrEP use depend on gender norms 14. HIV game-changers? A modified scoping review of adolescent boys and young men’s sexual health in the context of PrEP and ART in Southern Africa 15. Research with adolescent boys and young men living with HIV – reflections on ethical and methodological challenges in the Eastern Cape, South Africa 16. Theorising 'other' masculinities among adolescent boys and young men in Southern Africa: implications for sexual health
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Deevia Bhana is a professor and South African Research Chair in Gender and Childhood Sexuality at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. Her research focuses on how gender and sexuality come tomatter in the young life course. Her latest co-edited book is Sex, Sexuality and Sexual Health in Southern Africa (2023, Routledge).
Morten Skovdal is a community health psychologist and professor of participatory health research at the University of Copenhagen. He has a particular interest in involving children and young people in research, both to challenge dominant narratives, and to attune interventions to their lived realities. His latest book is entitled Paradoxes of PrEP for HIV Prevention (2025, Policy Press).
Kaymarlin Govender is a director of research at the HEARD Institute and a research professor in the College of Law and Management Sciences at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. He has more than 20 years of experience doing research, interventions and policy analysis with young and vulnerable populations on HIV and sexual and reproductive health and rights in Eastern and Southern Africa. He has more than 130 scientific papers, book chapters and technical reports and has co-edited special issues from leading journals on HIV and sexual health. His most recent co-edited book is Preventing HIV Among Young People in Southern and Eastern Africa: Emerging Evidence and Intervention Strategies (2021, Routledge).