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To Be Seen and Not Heard: Femininity Ideology and Adolescent Girls’ Sexual Health
Authors:Emily A. Impett Ph.D.  Deborah Schooler Ph.D.  Deborah L. Tolman Ed.D.
Affiliation:(1) Center for Research on Gender and Sexuality, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California, USA;(2) Center for Research on Gender and Sexuality, San Francisco State University, 2017 Mission Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California 94110, USA
Abstract:This study used a feminist developmental framework to test the hypothesis that internalizing conventional ideas about femininity in two domains—inauthenticity in relationships and body objectification—is associated with diminished sexual health among adolescent girls. In this study, sexual health was conceptualized as feelings of sexual self-efficacy (i.e., a girl's conviction that she can act upon her own sexual needs in a relationship) and protection behavior (i.e., from both STIs and unwanted pregnancy). A total of 116 girls (aged 16–19) completed measures of femininity ideology, sexual self-efficacy, sexual experiences, and protection behavior. Results revealed that inauthenticity in relationships and body objectification were associated with poorer sexual self-efficacy and sexual self-efficacy, in turn, predicted less sexual experience and less use of protection. Further, the two components of femininity ideology were associated with different forms of protection. The importance of a feminist developmental framework for identifying and understanding salient dimensions of sexual health for female adolescents is discussed.
Keywords:adolescent girls  femininity ideology  sexual health  sexual risk taking  sexual self-efficacy
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