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  1. Gender and Sexual Practice in Structural Context: Condom Use among Women Doing Sex Work in Southern India.Kim M. Blankenship, Lucía Fort, Mona J. E. Danner & Gay Young - 2018 - Gender and Society 32 (6):860-888.
    In this study, we elaborate connections among gender, structure, and practice to suggest how social structural relations shape social sexual practice and, in the process, reshape gender relations. Using survey data from a study of a community mobilization intervention, we investigate the connection between institutional arrangements and condom use practice in sexual encounters with commercial clients and intimate partners among 410 women engaged in sex trade in a semiurban town in southern India. Multinomial logistic regression analysis uncovers the effects of (...)
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  • “From the Heart”: Sex, Money, and the Making of a Gay Community in Senegal.Jason L. Ferguson - 2017 - Gender and Society 31 (2):245-265.
    What are the non-monetary dimensions of selling sex? This article offers a cultural approach to the question of sexual labors, drawing on field observations and interviews in a community of gay men in Dakar, Senegal. Removing the notion of sexual labors from the stigmatized zone of “survival sex,” I explore the affective, extramonetary dimensions of sexual labors. The men in this study labor not simply to make money. Instead, I argue that against a highly gendered cultural backdrop, one where male (...)
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  • Reconsidering Gendered Sexualities in a Generalized AIDS Epidemic.Nicole Angotti & Christie Sennott - 2016 - Gender and Society 30 (6):935-957.
    Using the threat of a severe AIDS epidemic in a collection of rural villages in South Africa, we illustrate how men and women reconsider gendered sexualities through conversations and interactions in everyday life. We draw from data collected by local ethnographers and focus on the processes through which men and women collectively respond to the threat posed by AIDS to relationships, families, and communities. Whereas previous research has shown that individuals often reaffirm hegemonic norms about gender and sexuality in response (...)
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