Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS

Includes bibliographical references. === Despite the popularity of sex(uality) peer education as an HIV prevention strategy within diverse contexts, an understanding of the experiences of those intimately placed within these programmes is limited. Instead, the majority of research in this field reli...

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Main Author: Wolf, Kimberly
Other Authors: Bennett, Jane
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12999
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-129992020-10-06T05:11:29Z Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS Wolf, Kimberly Bennett, Jane Africa, Adelene African Studies Includes bibliographical references. Despite the popularity of sex(uality) peer education as an HIV prevention strategy within diverse contexts, an understanding of the experiences of those intimately placed within these programmes is limited. Instead, the majority of research in this field relies on hegemonic notions of rational human behaviour that operates under the assumption that knowledge leads to sexual behaviour change. This study explores peer facilitators, peer educators, and NGO staff experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in Cape Town, South Africa to understand meaning-making around sex(uality) peer education within the complex power dynamics of donor-NGO interactions. This study provides a critical case study of a schools-based sex(uality) peer education intervention, drawing on individual and focus group interviews. Using a feminist and gender lense, the study highlights a number of features of the programme and implementation, which reinforces gender inequalities and notions of a rational sexual being rather than creating channels for a new understanding of sex(uality) to emerge. These include peer facilitators’ and peer educators’ experience as change agents rather than sex educators, the preference for biomedical and socio-economic content over gender content, and the overall absence of a critical engagement with gender constructions and power dynamics in relationships. The study also points to the limits of donor-funded interventions, which tend to prescribe the content and scope of schools-based programmes, to the detriment of real engagement with issues that face and constrain the target group including the implications of what ‘sex(uality) education’ has come to mean for young men and women engaged in these interventions. 2015-05-28T12:20:49Z 2015-05-28T12:20:49Z 2014 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12999 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities African Studies
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic African Studies
spellingShingle African Studies
Wolf, Kimberly
Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS
description Includes bibliographical references. === Despite the popularity of sex(uality) peer education as an HIV prevention strategy within diverse contexts, an understanding of the experiences of those intimately placed within these programmes is limited. Instead, the majority of research in this field relies on hegemonic notions of rational human behaviour that operates under the assumption that knowledge leads to sexual behaviour change. This study explores peer facilitators, peer educators, and NGO staff experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in Cape Town, South Africa to understand meaning-making around sex(uality) peer education within the complex power dynamics of donor-NGO interactions. This study provides a critical case study of a schools-based sex(uality) peer education intervention, drawing on individual and focus group interviews. Using a feminist and gender lense, the study highlights a number of features of the programme and implementation, which reinforces gender inequalities and notions of a rational sexual being rather than creating channels for a new understanding of sex(uality) to emerge. These include peer facilitators’ and peer educators’ experience as change agents rather than sex educators, the preference for biomedical and socio-economic content over gender content, and the overall absence of a critical engagement with gender constructions and power dynamics in relationships. The study also points to the limits of donor-funded interventions, which tend to prescribe the content and scope of schools-based programmes, to the detriment of real engagement with issues that face and constrain the target group including the implications of what ‘sex(uality) education’ has come to mean for young men and women engaged in these interventions.
author2 Bennett, Jane
author_facet Bennett, Jane
Wolf, Kimberly
author Wolf, Kimberly
author_sort Wolf, Kimberly
title Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS
title_short Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS
title_full Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS
title_fullStr Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS
title_full_unstemmed Sex educator or change agent? Experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of HIV and AIDS
title_sort sex educator or change agent? experiences of a sex(uality) peer education programme in an era of hiv and aids
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12999
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